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Theatre

Review: Waste

Gripped by a scandalous waste

November 19, 2015 12:59

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

1 min read

When the Lord Chamberlain banned Harley Granville Barker's 1907 "English tragedy," it was for reasons of sexual modesty. Barker's hero is Henry Trebell, an MP who is persuaded to work in a Conservative cabinet as the minister responsible for dissociating Church and State.

This bachelor's life-defining opportunity to affect the course and character of his country hits the buffers when his affair with a married woman results in pregnancy and potential scandal.

Yet, despite the Lord Chamberlain's motives, it's not the sexual intrigue in this play that grips. Rather it's the cold calculation with which the body politic responds to it.

There is always something fascinating about how the powerful operate behind closed doors. And in an age where formality and correct behaviour (whatever that is) were held as citadels of virtue, there's something enthralling about seeing that edifice crumble and the arrogant pomposity of men turn into panic.

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