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It is situated in the middle of a London park, in a Britain
which is in an undefined state of war and dealing brutally
with its domestic protesters. The characters stand for the
diligent apparatchik, the conscience-pricked fellow-traveller
and a compendium of awkward types.
But the grim achievement of Adshead's play is that it is
at once an abstract parable and a quite particular polemic,
as one might expect of an author whose last play, The Bogus
Woman, was a searing indictment of the realities of the
asylum system. It becomes apparent that what is being researched
here is a non-lethal chemical weapon which can psychologically
pacify enemy forces, rioters or entire populations. Pre-Prozac
tranquillisers used to be referred to as the “chemical
cosh”; what is envisioned here is such a cosh raised
to a societal level. Lest we delude ourselves that research
in this area is a paranoid fantasy, the programme includes
a list of some 30 websites on the subject. Nor are the events
set in a dystopian future, but rather at the end of the
last century.
Director Lisa Goldman allows Fiona Bell, Richard Owens and
Mark Monero space in which to find characterisations that
are natural and organic while still fully serving the play.
Goldman's Red Room company, which has produced this presentation
at Soho Theatre, once again confirms its reputation for
both theatrical and political outspokenness. And, despite
a final few minutes which suffer from both being a touch
too explicit and from having to recount offstage events
to us rather than show them, Adshead makes you want to take
to the streets while you still can. (4/5)
The Financial Times - 23rd September 2003
Animal
Soho Theatre, London
September 4-27
Author: Kay Adshead
Director: Lisa Goldman
Producer: Red Room
Cast Includes: Fiona Bell, Mark Monero and Richard Owens
Runing time: 1hr 30mins
In a dystrophic near future, where all public protest is
put down by the firm hand of the riot police, the government
sets up a special treatment centre where vulnerable patients
are used as guinea pigs for the latest weapon of crowd control,
tranquillising gas. Surely, this cannot be our own green
and pleasant land?
In Kay Adshead's powerful an moving new play, Pongo, a lifelong
drunk, finds himself in the secluded detox centre where
his recovery from alcohol addiction is twisted by the chemicals
he is given as 'treatment'. As he becomes increasingly dependent
on the liberal but authoritarian Dr Lee, his only lifeline
to reality is the psychiatric nurse, Elmo.
Adshead writes with immense imaginative empathy about psychological
disturbance and the side-effects of pharmaceuticals –
and her descriptions of police violence and public protest
are superbly vivid. Yet her evident anger about the power
of drugs companies is also wickedly laced with humour –
Elmo spends his free time as an hilarious politically incorrect
stand-up comic. Adshead's main point, that do-gooders such
as Dr Lee can do as much damage as out and out reactionaries,
is cogent and convincing.
Neatly directed by the Red Room's Lisa Goldman, on Soutra
Gilmour's simple set, Animal effectively uses evocative
video images and boasts a committed cast – Richard
Owens as Pongo, Fiona Bell ( Dr Lee ) and Mark Monero playing
Elmo – which brings this panoramic play to life. Despite
occasional wrong notes, such as Dr Lee's Czech origins,
this is a refreshingly alive and thought-provoking piece
of political drama.
Aleks Sierz - The Stage
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