The
Suicide
by
Suhayla El-Bushra, after Erdman
Could
Have Been A Contender
Hard as it is to believe now, some idealistic folk chose to live in Soviet Russia
moving from Europe to build a socialist utopia. Only for it to end in imprisonment or worse. It's a sombre way
to start a review for a comedy from the National Theatre fashioned from a
Soviet era satire.
But it also shows the courage, or maybe
recklessness, it took for Nikolai Erdman to hatch under these conditions
mordant black comedy The Suicide which
has now inspired a complete twenty first century revamp by Suhayia El-Bushra.
Stalin's regime banned The Suicide and the
playwright himself was arrested and exiled from Moscow - career suicide at the
very least. Well, this new updated crammed-full--of-characters play directed by Nadia Fall
is unlikely to inflict a similar fate on its writer.
Sam Desai (Javone Prince) dreamed once of becoming a footballer but
now veers towards the decidedly chubby and loses his dole money after a missed
job centre appointment. Long suffering wife Maya (Rebecca Scroggs) tries to hold things together
while they live with her sexually-active mother Sarah (Ashley McGuire) on the Clement Atlee
Estate.
Filled with half-hearted despair he equally half-heartedly considers
suicide from the top of a building.
He little knows this is being filmed by
YouTube-savvy kids who post videos on the internet which quickly go viral.
Enter an array of modern types whose
characters are sprinkled with issues and their own agendas: the salaried social
worker (Pooky Quesnel) protesting about underfunding and promoting her son (Michael Karim), the local
politician (Pal Aron), the bling goddess who wants
protection from her boyfriend (Ayesha Antoine), the minted dreadlocked filmmaker (Paul Kaye) with ultra-focussed
German sidekick (Lizzie Winkler), the trainee teacher (Tom Robertson) with poetic aspirations and cafe owner(Lisa Jackson) hoping to profit from a last supper.
There's a lot of effort in the production with a
backdrop of Ben Stones' multilayered granite set design and some outsize video
graphics from Andrzej Goulding. But it all feels a bit scattergun, typified by
a Sam-Desai-In-Hell scene suddenly inserted which had the feel of sketch comedy
rather than integral to the story.
The characters outweigh the plot and, while there
are amusing moments, the story and rhythm of the piece are the losers. It's the kind of play one really wants to like, but seems intent on
hoisting its own petard.
As if a number of characters have been plucked from
various sources with the story as an afterthought. More pot pourri of (some
admittedly very good) ideas than a credible satiric world about to fall off a
tower block ledge.
Still, it's fast, frantic and very colourful with some
neat expressionist-style design touches, whiplash -type drumming from Sam Jones to ratchet up the tention. And a lot of
goodwill from the audience on the evening we went to see the play. An amber light.
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