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Theatre

The Best Man

Some political wisdom we could do with today

March 9, 2018 16:09
L-R Honeysuckle Weeks (Mabel Cantwell) & Jeff Fahey (Joseph Cantwell) - The Best Man at The Playhouse (c) Pamela Raith Photography-092.jpg

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

1 min read

In 1960, Gore Vidal wrote a question in the form of a play: can principle ever survive politics?

It’s as relevant as ever, of course. But what makes Simon Evans’s terrifically performed revival fly is that it is brimful of the wit for which Gore — the man who once said “any American who is prepared to run for president should automatically, by definition, be disqualified for doing so” — was known.

The action takes place in a Texas hotel in which two presidential hopefuls are staying with their wives (Glynis Barber and Honeysuckle Weeks) while their (unspecified) political party chooses its White House candidate. Martin Shaw is Secretary William Russell, a kind of forerunner of The West Wing’s well-heeled, liberal Jed Bartlett. American actor Jeff Fahey is his Rottweiler opponent, Senator Joseph Cantwell.

It emerges that the ruthless Cantwell is about to publish his opponent’s medical records, which may cast doubt on Russell’s mental stability. And although Russell is the more principled politician, his campaign manager has also been doing some digging, and the two politicians face each other with information from the other’s past that could finish the other’s career.