Theatre

Playboy Of The Western World @ Richmond Theatre, Richmond



cast list
Andrew Bennett, Derbhle Crotty, Clare Dunne, Andy Kellegher, Aidan Kelly, Marcus Lamb, Aaron Monaghan, Christiane O’Mahony, John Olohan, Gemma Reeves & Seona Tully

directed by
Garry Hynes
Its remembered as the play that sparked a riot.

On its premiere in 1907 the audience of Dublins Abbey Theatre reacted wildly to JM Synges portrayal of the Irish rural poor in his story of an errant young man who charms a coastal village with boasts of how hes murdered his father.

Theres little danger of this happening among Richmonds retirees or indeed in forthcoming shows in Salford, Liverpool or Cardiff.

But the blacker shades of Synges comic masterpiece have certainly been brought to the fore in this near faultless production from Galways Druid theatre company.

The ultra rustic set design from Francis OConnor sets the tone.
Flahertys dingy, high-walled tavern is home to the elderly Michael (John Olohan), his barmaid daughter Pegeen (Clare Dunne) and a clutch of poteen-soaked locals who all latch onto Christie Mahons (Aaron Monaghan) garrulous tales of slaying his bullying father with unsettling relish.

The excellent Monaghan may be a particularly un-pinup like Playboy especially from a company whove previously had Cork heartthrob Cillian Murphy in the same role but this only serves to heighten the power of his words and the drabness of the lives of the villagers. Most notably, the ever more smitten Pegeen, who seeks an escape from her feeble suitor Shawn Keogh (a marvelously pathetic Marcus Lamb), and man-eater Widow Quinn (an unsettling Derbhle Crott).

Though this is no dour homage even if the clichd musical interludes (tin whistles and uilleann pipes on keyboards) suggest otherwise. The cast work hard to draw out the numerous comic moments, some of them even verging on the slapstick. In particular, the three immature village girls who cackle and skip excitedly around the murdering curiosity man employed by Pegeen as pot boy.

But director Garry Hyness nuanced take on Synges masterful script satisfies the heart and the head as well as the funny bones, especially in the latter stages when Christies past catches up with him, forcing Pegeen to reconsider their romance. Its therefore not surprising to learn that Hynes has directed several productions of Playboy (even set designing and acting a small part in an early one) since co-founding Druid in 1975. Little wonder, then, why some have labeled Druids productions of the play as ‘definitive’.

Whether such a claim can be entertained is of course not really in the spirit of modern theatre criticism, save to say that this is a superior revival reminding us of a still vital play. Though if anyone can boast of having a better understanding than most of the work of this influential but oft-overlooked playwright, its Druid. From 2005-06 the company staged all six of Synges plays in one day under the title DruidSynge in Galway, Edinburgh and various US cities.

But thats not to say theyre stuck in the past. The Galway company have regularly premiered plays by leading Irish writers, including Martin McDonagh (The Beauty Queen of Leenane, 1996, among others) and Enda Walsh (The Walworth Farce, 2007), two writers whose warped takes on the Irish experience owe more than a debt to Synge even if theyll probably never start a riot.



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