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Theatre

Theatre review: Aristocrats

Friel's play draws parallels with Chekov, but he's not as good

August 24, 2018 09:45
Elaine Cassidy (Alice) and Emmet Kirwan (Eamon) in Aristocrats at the Donmar Warehouse. Directed by Lyndsey Turner, designed by Es Devlin. Photo Johan Persson
2 min read

Comparing the late, great Brian Friel (1929- 2015) to Chekhov — a comparison that Friel himself invited — is to both give Friel his due and do him a disservice.

Yet the parallels are too obvious to ignore. You could take the subject and Donegal setting of this 1970s-set minor classic (written in 1979), about the decline of an upper-class family, and view it as a close cousin of Chekhov’s final play, The Cherry Orchard. Both dramas, for example, explore the loss of a privileged existence and the estate in which it is lived.

In the case of Aristocrats, in which the whiskey flows as freely as does Russian hooch in Uncle Vanya, it is the Big House that sits above Friel’s fictional village of Ballybeg that is at stake. There are also three sisters here, and an emotionally brittle brother. All are descended from a domineering and dying old judge on whose pension those members of the family who live in the house depend.

All have come together for the wedding of the youngest daughter Claire (Aisling Loftus), a hugely talented pianist whose life as a soloist was aborted by her father because, to him, a peripatetic artist’s life seemed unseemly.

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