The Week

Theatre: Kes

Octagon Theatre, Bolton, until 2 April, then Theatre by the Lake, Keswick, 6-30 April ★★★★

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Any stage adaptation of Barry Hines’s 1968 novel

A Kestrel for a Knave faces considerab­le challenges, said Chris Bartlett in The Stage. It’s not just that Ken Loach’s 1969 film version, Kes, is “seared onto the memories of a generation of cinemagoer­s”, so expectatio­ns for this “most iconic of British coming-of-age stories” will always be sky high. It’s also that the story hinges on the intense bond between a 15-year-old boy and a live kestrel. However, Atri Banerjee’s visually arresting and “coherently realised” staging solves that problem by never actually showing us the titular bird. Kes is talked about, in evocative passages where the young Billy explains how he found and trained the kestrel; meanwhile its movements are represente­d onstage by Nishla Smith, whose hauntingly beautiful singing voice – on versions of 1960s standards such as The Girl from Ipanema

– also expresses the characters’ hopes and desires.

The brisk one-hour staging, featuring just three actors on a simple set, is more a “poetic evocation” of Kes than a “slavish” adaptation, said Mark Fisher in The Guardian. We get all the famous scenes of sadistic teachers and misplaced bets, but not always in the order we expect. And if we don’t quite get the “full force of Billy’s innocent appreciati­on of the bird”, we certainly do feel moved by the absence of Kes/Smith at the culminatio­n of what is a “bold and adventurou­s ensemble production”.

The actors are first-rate and their accents are properly “Barnsley-authentic”, said Neal Keeling in the Manchester Evening News. Jake Dunn brings “energy and fragility” to the role of the angry, abused, neglected Billy – and also conveys his “wide-eyed fear and wonder” when he realises, thanks to Kes, that escape is possible from a “dirty grey life”. In a tour-de-force performanc­e, Harry Egan plays multiple parts, including Billy’s thuggish brother and the sadistic PE teacher Mr Sugden (played by Brian Glover in the film). And Smith’s “haunting, ethereal” interludes shower hope over the grim reality of Billy’s life. It’s a bleak play, but brilliant.

The week’s other opening

Tom Fool

Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond (020-8940 3633). Until 16 April

This “deeply felt” family drama from the German playwright Franz Xaver Kroetz is a “sharp exploratio­n of the way finances wriggle their way into the existing rifts of everyday life”. Diyan Zora’s well-acted production is equal parts “bleak and funny” (Guardian).

 ?? ?? Dunn: brings “energy and fragility” to the role of Billy
Dunn: brings “energy and fragility” to the role of Billy

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