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Theatre

Theatre review: John

Annie Baker's new play is a masterpiece, says our critic

February 1, 2018 11:59
3. JOHN (Anneika Rose as Jenny and Tom Mothersdale as Elias) (c) Stephen Cummiskey
2 min read

Very occasionally, a new playwright comes along who shifts the general understanding of what a play can be. Annie Baker is one such. For much of her 2014 Pulitzer-winning work The Flick, the employees of a Massachusetts independent cinema are allowed to exist outside any plot or authorial purpose. They turn up. They sweep the floor. The dialogue is often film-fan chat and uncompromisingly nerdish. And then, slowly, over the course of three hours or more, a story unfolds and takes hold.

Baker’s latest does that again. It is also deeply spooky and, without being religious, highly spiritual in its way. The down-to-earth setting is a Gettysburg b&b run by the slow-moving and elderly Mertis (the wonderful American actor Marylouise Burke) — Kitty to her friends. Into this kitsch setting, festooned with American Civil War curios and Kitty’s doll collection (design Chloe Mumford), arrives Jenny (Anneika Rose) and Elias (Tom Mothersdale). The couple have been together for three years and, it emerges, are attempting to repair a fractured relationship. Jenny had an affair. But the more we see of the unsympathetic and neurotic Elias, the more we see why.

Baker’s play works on several levels, all of them engrossing. James Macdonald’s production devotes a similar amount of stage time to what might be called observational drama as does The Flick. That is to say people do stuff here for seemingly no overt dramatic reason — switching on lights, reading books or just snuggling down on the common room sofa. Done right — as it is here — it generates tension. But it also delivers a good deal of comedy rooted in the quirks of human behaviour when the human in question is in solitude.

No less closely observed is the relationship between Elias and Jenny. One of their early exchanges might seem innocuous. They have been disagreeing. Jenny says “I don’t know why that turned into a fight,” and Elias says, “That wasn’t a fight.”