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CurtainUp The Internet Theater Magazine of Reviews, Features,
Annotated Listings |
A CurtainUp London Review
The Lie
Alice and Paul have asked Laurence and Michel round to supper that evening and Alice's dilemma is whether she should tell her best friend. Alice feels like cancelling dinner but Paul is aware that he has already opened two bottles of an expensive wine to let them breathe, the celebrated Chateau Lafitte. His statement, "But I have opened two bottles of wine!" becomes something of a refrain. He expresses an opinion that he doesn't think Michel kissing another woman is any of Michel wife's Laurence's business. This is the prompt for the couple to discuss the rights and wrongs of disclosure of the implied infidelity of another. She will be indignant, he will be evasive. The couple arrive: the very animated and effervescent Laurence (Alexandra Gilbreath) and her more sedate husband, the allegedly philandering Michel. Alice starts to tell her tale of what she saw in the taxi while Paul tries to cut her off. Michel relates the honesty question to his occupation as a publisher where he feels his authors would not receive well his truthful opinion on the shortcomings of their novels and so favours lying. Paul puts his foot in it with a quip, "If everyone told the truth, there wouldn't be a single couple left on earth!" The visiting couple leave and Alice insists that Paul tell her the truth about whether he has had an affair. After a lot of argument, when Alice winkles out of him something she really doesn't want to hear, Paul will spend the night on the sofa. The bombshells will drop and the plot takes serpentine leaps as confessions are elicited and then taken back. Florian Zeller's play is a development of the classic French farce, except that the comedy here is word driven and displays mental agility and deception rather than physical racing around. Thank goodness Florian Zeller's couples appear childless. We can only imagine the effect that all this complicated deceit would have on the children. His plays are always rather well balanced. There are no innocent victims, only transgressors. Listening to the dialogue, the delicious humour reminds me of Yasmina Reza's play Art but that may also be because both are French and translated by Christopher Hampton. Anna Fleischle's set too is of those elegant Parisian mansion flats, spacious, airy and decorated minimally with exacting taste. In director Lindsay Posner's capable hands, the performances are tip top and believable, although armed with my cynical approach, I saw the denouement coming quite early on. I loved Alex Hanson's flustered red face. Now what would be really interesting would be the play about real life infidelity about two actors playing a married couple, who are married in real life and conducting affairs. Florian Zeller's play is a very amusing night out for anyone not hiding secret entanglements for whom it could open a can of worms. |
Search CurtainUp in the box below PRODUCTION NOTES The Lie Written by Florian Zeller In a translation by Christopher Hampton Directed by Lindsay Posner Starring: Samantha Bond, Alexander Hanson, Alexandra Gilbreath, Tony Gardner Designer: Anna Fleischle Lighting Design: Howard Harrison Sound Design: Gregory Clark Composer: Isobel Waller Running time: One hour 30 minutes with no interval By arrangement with Theatre Royal Bath productions Box Office: 020 7378 1713 Booking to 18th November 2017 Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge based on 7th October 2017 performance at Menier Choclate Factory, 53 Southwark Street, London SE1 1RU (Rail/Tube: London Bridge) Index of reviewed shows still running REVIEW FEEDBACK Highlight one of the responses below and click "copy" or"CTRL+C"
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