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Theatre

Theatre review: Absolute Hell

John Nathan isn't impressed by an over-stuffed plot

May 3, 2018 13:42
Kate Fleetwood in Absolute Hell
2 min read

In 1952 Rodney Ackland’s play, then known as The Pink Room, was probably the first attempt by the British stage to refer to the Holocaust. The play didn’t go down well. Punters and theatre management didn’t like it. But not because of the Holocaust, rather because of the cross section of far from heroic dissolutes who Ackland presents as the inheritors of Britain’s victory.

Set just after the end of World War Two in Europe, the play is brimful of bohemians who escape the reality of their lives by living most of it in the premises of La Vie en Rose, a bomb-damaged Soho drinking club. It is run by Christine Foskett (Kate Fleetwood) a generous-to-a-fault extrovert who pours drinks as liberally for herself as she does for her clientele.

Among them is struggling writer Hugh Marriner (Charles Edwards). He needs a £200 loan to pay urgent debts and so prevent his faltering 16-year relationship with Nigel from failing altogether.

Unfortunately the amiable Austrian refugee Siegfried (Danny Webb) can only manage a couple of pounds, much of which Hugh uses to buy Siegfried drinks. So Hugh eventually gets the dosh from Maurice Hussey (Jonathan Slinger), a sadistically flamboyant agent upon whom Hugh has placed all his hopes of selling his film script.