The End Of Longing
By
Matthew Perry
That's What Friends Are For
Long
before the sitcom Friends hit our screens in our homes, the place of friendship
and love in modern life provided the script of many a Hollywood movie and also
proved an ironic backdrop in at least one darkly humorous song sung by two celebrities in a hidden real-life illicit relationship
Now
Matthew Perry - of Friends' fame - who tells us he contributed to the sitcom'sscripts has put together his first play, also with dark undertones, The End
of Longing. The story of four 40-something singletons drawn together in the bar and the bedroom.
Smoothly
directed by Lindsey Posner with slick design by Anna Fleischle, Perry takes the
lead role as heavy drinking photographer Jack downing enough vodka "to
finance Russia".
TLT
and her four wheeled conveyance did wonder exactly what the title meant and if
it were a quote from a poem or similar. A quick Google turned up a political science paper "The End of Longing ? Notes towards a history of post war German Longing" - surely not? - and the equally unlikely
source of a historical novel by Australian writer Ian Reid.
Well,
maybe we are given notes ... The quickly passing staccato scenes are like the
pages of a notebook quickly turning and have the feel of a a sitcom or soap,
even to the point of one character joking whether they have half an hour's
worth of material.
The over size angular
scenery sliding in and out could be in a studio lot and, after tragedy looms in
the second act, the power of positive thinking and a happy ending wins out.
The
types are familiar TV characters: A high-class $2,500 an hour hooker Stephanie
(statuesque Jennifer Mudge). An female pharma executive desperate to have a
baby Stevie (Christina Cole a bundle of nervous energy). The two women bonded
reaching for the same latte in some coffee shop or other ;). And, the most
intriguing character, the seemingly dim
but good natured Joseph (a finely judged performance from Lloyd Owen) who met
Jtack on the sports' field.
Maybe
behind this brittle play, there's a real
story which the production reflects. Certainly Perry's battle with drink and drugs hit the headlines. But is it too fanciful to think that the genuine
nature of friendship after fame strikes
must also be a obsession?
There
are hints of a self reflexive play here reflecting on the skewing of life by TV
tropes with its references to the TV process with its switching of old wine in
new bottles, to pitch, sell, stay in the limelight and update to today's
broadcasting currency.
We're
in a bar, we're in a bedroom, we're in a late night pharmacy, we're in a
hospital, in a church asking for a miracle and maybe finally on the cusp of a
script pitch and commission. Then there are the off stage plots - pretending to
be a couple to meet the parents, the Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and so on.
In
the end, it's Matthew Perry who is the draw and Friends' fans may well be
satisfied. It's an odd fish of a play but we prefer to believe it's a more
sophisticated vehicle than a shuffling
of pre-programmed plot cards and characters, leaving us to discern what is actually
happening and what is TV fantasy. An
amber light for an uneven play given a polished production.
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