SHINING CITY. To 9 June.
Bolton
SHINING CITY
by Conor McPherson
Octagon Theatre To 9 June 2007
Mon-Sat 7.30pm Mat 6 June 2pm
Audio-described 6 June 7.30pm
BSL Signed 7 June
TICKETS: 01204 520661
www.octagonbolton.co.uk
Review: Timothy Ramsden 26 May
Production works well, but doesn’t live up to its own publicity.
Theatre needs an audience and that means marketing. The Octagon’s gone all-out for the tenuous horror-show link to Conor McPherson’s play. But the publicity image of a frantic woman at a frosted-glass pane, references to The Sixth Sense and quotes from critics about laughs and chills, may come back to haunt the theatre.
Like McPherson’s earlier drama The Weir (at the Octagon in 2003) Shining City is full of hauntings. But the earlier play’s overt ghost stories are replaced by a single, more oblique tale, its ghost-provoking rural isolation by Dublin’s urban stresses. It’s here Ian, a former Catholic priest, has set-up as a therapist.
Paul McCleary’s Ian could have acquired his comforting manner, hunched forward, quietly-spoken in his chair as he speaks to his client John, in either job. But behind the calm is his disturbance over the dead Mari, marked in interwoven scenes where he seeks emotional comfort with woman friend Neasa and rent-boy Laurence.
His failure to lay Mari’s memory to rest is apparent in the one moment that matches the publicity’s expectations. It’s a visual moment in a play otherwise dominated by speech, a shock in a drama otherwise proceeding quietly, and often hesitant-seeming. Three years ago, in the author’s Royal Court production (see review in reviewsgate’s Archive), it was the aspect of the play that tested London’s fastidious critics.
It’s likely to be what gets audiences talking in Bolton, after the quieter, psychological shifts. Unlike The Weir, most of the dialogue doesn’t directly unravel the pressures confirmed in the closing moment. McPherson demands close attention to what seems dramatically inconsequential but which builds the dark individual experience beneath the city’s shine.
Mark Babych’s production catches the right key; quietly intense, with the sense of lives struggling on. George Irving has a more openly anxious manner than Stanley Townsend, who was magnificent in the role in London, but as someone more clearly disturbed by memories that are gradually palliated, Irving is fine.
A bold choice for the Octagon, it comes off in its own terms but might find an audience fractious from being led to expect something more upfront and visceral.
Neasa: Mairead Conneely
John: George Irving
Ian: Paul McCleary
Laurence: Conor Michael Ryan
Director: Mark Babych
Designer: Dawn Allsopp
Lighting: Jason Osterman
Sound: Andy Smith
Dialect coach: Sally Hague
2007-05-29 11:19:03