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The Jewish Chronicle

Review: Gethsemane

A simplistic tale of political corruption

November 13, 2008 10:52
Corrupt Labour fundraiser Otto Fallon (Stanley Townsend) schmoozes ethical ex-teacher Lori (Nicola Walker)

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

1 min read

David Hare's latest play arrives amid a rash of disclaimers and denials. There is even a whiff of affidavit in the programme note, in which Hare says his play is drawn from "public events" yet is a work of "pure fiction". The words "eat", "have" and "cake" come to mind.

But in a play featuring as it does a Prime Minister Beasley (played by Anthony Calf) with Christian convictions; a Home Secretary (Tamsin Greig) whose husband is mired in prosecutions abroad; and last but most, a teetotal Labour Party fundraiser called Otto Fallon (Stanley Townsend), it is fair to say that we can be sure about which public figures Hare is writing - even though Fallon smokes dope and has a ponytail, and plays squash with Beasley rather than tennis.

To underline the relationship, Bob Crowley's design for Howard Davies's slick production is a squash court-shaped-enclosure. Yet the heroine in Hare's play is not a politician, but ex-school teacher Lori (Nicola Walker) who gave up her vocation in what she describes as her moment of doubt, just like Jesus's in the garden of Gethsemane.

Using too much coincidence, Hare links the emotional and political elements of his play. While Lori's husband has landed a job with Fallon's fundraising operation, Lori counsels her ex-pupil, the Home Secretary's drug-taking daughter Suzette (Jessica Raine), who would have been expelled had Fallon not bribed her school with a new gym.