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Theatre

Theatre review: The Dumb Waiter

There's plenty of mirth and menace in this Pinter revival

December 11, 2020 13:15
The Dumb Waiter Production Image 1 L-R Shane Zaza, Alec Newman Copyright Helen Maybanks
2 min read

This is the second time in as many months that a Harold Pinter play has heralded a British theatre’s return to live performance. Bath’s Theatre Royal chose the Nobel laureate’s Betrayal while Hampstead have gone for an earlier work first seen at the theatre in 1960.

The play’s genius is simple. Two hitmen — here played by Alec Newman and Shane Zaza — wait in the basement of a large house in Birmingham for orders.

Gus (Zaza) and Ben kill time before their next murder with random small talk. The length of their stay is implied by two single barrack-like beds on which the two while away the vacant hours.

The windowless, octagonal room (design, James Perkins) in which all the action — and inaction — takes place is as sinister as a torture cell. The peeling wallpaper is the colour of concrete. And whatever the original purpose of the drainage channels in the bare brick floor, the sense gathers that they will be useful when the waiting ends and things get bloody.