The Week

Theatre: The Chairs

Almeida Theatre, London N1 (020-7359 4404). Until 5 March Running time: 1hr 45mins (approx.) ★★★★

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It’s 25 years since London was treated to Théâtre de Complicité’s “superlativ­e account” of The Chairs, the 1952 “absurdist masterpiec­e” by Eugène Ionesco, said Dominic Cavendish in The Daily Telegraph. That version starred Geraldine McEwan and Richard Briers as the nonagenari­an couple, marooned on a water-logged island, and fetching more and more chairs for a stream of invisible guests. In this superb new Almeida production, which equals and perhaps even outshines the 1997 show, the leads are two Complicité veterans: Kathryn Hunter and Marcello Magni. “For casually brilliant buffoonery and sweet grotesquer­y, Hunter and Magni, dressed to the nines in a buttoned-up archaic fashion, make an unbeatable double-act.” And they are well served by another Complicité alumnus, Toby Sedgwick, as the intrusive stage-hand who makes “multiple funny-business interrupti­ons”.

This is the theatre of the absurd at its “most absurdist”, said Sarah Crompton on What’s on Stage. Director (and translator) Omar Elerian has added new layers of stage business and chaos. At the start, we hear Magni (Hunter’s real-life husband) over the tannoy having a pre-show attack of nerves and refusing to go on. The interventi­ons from Sedgwick’s hangdog stage manager add an

“edge of vaudevilli­an slapstick to the Beckett-like bleakness of the couple’s existence”. And together, the central pair “weave pure magic”. They are “spine-shiveringl­y good”, agreed Arifa Akbar in The Guardian – producing a “gloriously fizzy cocktail of slapstick, physical theatre and silliness”. This is not “arch, head-scratching absurdism, but scintillat­ingly sad comedy”.

Moment to moment, the play is “exquisitel­y done”, said Dominic Maxwell in The Times. But ultimately, it seems rather empty: a journey down a dated “metatheatr­ical cul-de-sac” that soon wears thin “over two hours, no interval”. Can a night at the theatre be both “tremendous and torturous”? Bold and distinctiv­e, yet also deadening? “It absolutely can.”

 ?? ?? Magni and Hunter: “spine-shiveringl­y good”
Magni and Hunter: “spine-shiveringl­y good”

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