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Theatre

Theatre revew: Kiss of the Spiderwoman

Do we really need yet another version of the Argentinian prison drama?

March 28, 2018 09:59
Declan Bennett (Valentin), Samuel Barnett (Molina) - image by Nobby Clark
1 min read

There have been more versions of Manuel Puig’s 1976 novel than any one person could possibly wish to see. The book was followed by a play, a musical (by Cabaret and Chicago creators Kander and Ebb) and most famously the movie, for which William Hurt won an Oscar. It was well deserved. But then, Hurt’s role of Molina, the extravagantly camp window dresser (“which practically makes me an interior designer”), who has been arrested because he is gay and shares an Argentinian prison cell with the equally extravagantly macho Valentin, is a peach of a part.

In this new (and yet another) adaptation by José Rivera and Allan Baker, Molina is played by Samuel Barnett. Declan Bennett is Valentin, the revolutionary who views his cellmate’s sexuality with almost as much suspicion as he does the junta who torture him.

You could, if you could be bothered, view the characters as the yin and yang of the male id. It might freshen what is otherwise the rather stale dramatic device of confining two opposite character types in one small space.

As with the film, Barnett’s role is the more interesting. His Molina soothes Valentin’s torments with vivid descriptions of plots of his favourite romantic films. And it is here that Laurie Sansom’s production inventively breaks free of the airless underground prison in which all the action is set by illustrating Molina’s lovingly performed scenes with animated silhouettes projected on to the stark, concrete walls.