Helen McCrory, Julie Walters and Rory Kinnear in The Last of the Haussmans |
The Last of the Haussmans, the second National Theatre production to be transmitted this season in the HD series NT Live, is the first play written by the actor Stephen Beresford, but you’d never guess because it’s bursting with confidence and it has a distinctive vision. Like the Lisa Cholodenko movies Laurel Canyon and The Kids Are All Right, it’s a high comedy that focuses on the repercussions of the sixties, but it doesn’t go soft (as Laurel Canyon did) or rigid (as The Kids Are All Right did); it’s a resolutely fair-minded satire that turns unexpectedly poignant. The great Julie Walters gives an exuberant, high-style performance as Judy, a hippie whose tireless quest for self-exploration led her to abandon her two children to be raised by her parents. Now she’s in her sixties, they’re fortyish, and brother and sister are drawn to the house on the Devon Coast she inherited from her parents when she undergoes surgery for melanoma. Libby (Helen McCrory), the elder sibling, has been raising her fifteen-year-old daughter Summer (Isabella Laughland) by herself – until Summer’s long-absent dad decides to re-enter her life and invites her to spend part of the summer with him and his new wife in France. Libby is on the rebound from her latest unsuccessful amour. Her brother Nick (Rory Kinnear) is a gay man in a perpetual state of heartbreak; he’s also a recovering junkie. Their relationship with their mother is sometimes strained, often ironic, and irresolvably complex. The other characters are Judy’s doctor, Peter (Matthew Marsh), who is cheating on his wife with Libby, and a laconic nineteen-year-old named Daniel (Taron Egerton) who arouses Peter’s paternal instincts, Nick’s libido and Summer’s teenage interest, but develops his own crush on Libby. However, the household revolves around Judy, who is just as free a spirit, just as outrageous and irrepressible and infuriating, as she must have been when she walked away from her children to join an ashram decades ago.
Helen McCrory and Rory Kinnear (Photo: Catherine Ashmore) |
It’s a splendid play, though the language is dense enough that just reading
it doesn’t do it justice. The production, directed by Howard Davies and built
around the remarkable performances of Walters, McCrory and Kinnear, absolutely
does. Not every show mounted at the National is a triumph, but based on the NT
Live slate this season – The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-time, Haussmans and the Simon Russell Beale Timon of Athens
I reviewed last week – you’d think they couldn’t put a foot wrong. This
series is a gift to theatergoers all over the world, most of whom wouldn’t
otherwise get the chance to see any of the National’s offerings. The rest of
the season includes a revival of Arthur Wing Pinero’s Victorian farce The
Magistrate starring John Lithgow and two more new plays, including the
latest by Alan Bennett, the best living English playwright. I can hardly wait.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor
of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester,
Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The
Threepenny Review and The Boston Phoenix and is the
author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American
Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade;
and High Comedy in American Movies.
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