The
Telegraph, October 30, 2015
The Hairy Ape, Old
Vic, review: 'supple and captivating'
By Jane Shilling
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The Hairy Ape
performed at the Old Vic Theatre. Bertie Carvel
as Yank. Credit: Alastair Muir |
The precise quality that distinguishes humans from
apes has been fiercely debated since Darwinian
times, yet the question, “what is a man” continues
to intrigue and provoke. In 1922, Eugene O’Neill
undertook his own exploration of the conundrum in a
play that drew on his own grim experience as a
seafarer.
The protagonist of The Hairy Ape is Yank, a fireman
aboard a cruise ship sailing out of New York. Above
decks the wealthy passengers disport themselves,
while below in the stokehold Yank and his colleagues
- stripped, sweating and begrimed with coal dust -
labour to feed the insatiable furnace.
O’Neill described his play as a mixture of
expressionism and naturalism - a blend for which he
coined the term “super-naturalism”. In eight scenes
Yank evolves from the undisputed alpha male of the
stokehold to the (literally) crushed victim of an
ape that he has released from its cage at the zoo.
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Credit:
Alastair Muir |
O’Neill’s drama maintains a tense equilibrium between
mechanism and humanity. His characters are “types” -
Yank, the Everyman (Bertie Carvel) and his colleagues
Paddy (Steffan Rhodri), a drunken Irishman lyrically in
love with the old days of sail, and Long (Callum Dixon),
a radical Socialist; the brittle socialite, Mildred
(Rosie Sheehy) and her censorious aunt (Buffy Davis).
Nevertheless, they resonate with unstereotypical
emotions of rage, longing and distress.
Director Richard Jones tackles this formidable balancing
act with verve, drawing ensemble work of magnificent
assurance from his cast and production team. Stewart
Laing’s sparse, supple designs beautifully suggest the
inhuman context of Yank’s tragedy. Mimi Jordan Sherin’s
bravura lighting makes the audience flinch in sympathy
with O’Neill’s characters, while Aletta Collins’s
sharp-edged choreography, set to Sarah Angliss’s
disturbing fractal soundscape, eloquently conveys a
sense of brutal disjunction.
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Credit:
Alastair Muir |
Jones’s direction steers a precisely calibrated
course between O’Neill’s broad vision of a society
dehumanized by the caesura between rich and poor,
and his characters’ individual tragedies. The cast
portrays the stokehold and the heartless socialites
of Fifth Avenue, emerging smugly sanctimonious from
Sunday morning church service, with captivating
conviction.
Sheehy offers a fierce account of Mildred’s
implacable egotism, disastrously mitigated by ado-gooding
instinct that proves fatal to Yank’s sense of self,
while Bertie Carvel gives moving expression to
Yank’s rage and vulnerability, growing steadily in
stature with every new assault of misfortune,
violence and frustration. With a slight vocal shift
from volume to projection, his admirable performance
might become a great one.
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