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Theatre

Theatre review: The Last Five Years

This timeslip romance between a Jewish man and his non-Jewish partner is bittersweet

October 11, 2020 17:22
056_L5Y Southwark Playhouse_Pamela Raith Photography
2 min read

It has been nearly 20 years since Jason Robert Brown’s two-hander song cycle received its first performance in Chicago. Since then the bittersweet work based on his own first failed marriage has become such a popular chamber piece it must be verging on modern classic status.

This production, directed by Jonathan O’Boyle, was rudely interrupted by Covid, received a new lease of life online and now defiantly returns to the stage in the teeth of the pandemic’s second wave.

Despite this the venue has apparently hung on to most of its capacity. Whereas most theatres have opened by reducing the number of seats, Southwark Playhouse achieves social distancing by inserting transparent perspex sheets between the seats. Almost everyone sits in their own personal booth. This is theatre for the Covid age. Yet what happens on stage more than survives the restrictions.

Oli Higginson is Jewish Jamie and Molly Lynch is Cathy, his “Shiksa Goddess” as Jamie’s first number in the show describes her. Despite the song’s derogatory title it is one of the wittiest, catchiest numbers in the score during which Jamie revels in the shock that his mother and the rest of the “JCC of Spring Valley” will feel when they discover he has fallen for a non-Jewish girl. She has arrived in his life after a long list of Jewish girls whose names make up an entire verse, and whose framed portraits Higginson’s Jamie places on the grand — often-revolving — piano that dominates the stage in O’Boyle’s production.