Monday, 24 June 2013

THEATER REVIEW: YES, PRIME MINISTER

A scene from Yes, Prime Minister.
We are amused

By Ed Rampell

Yes, Prime Ministeris in the tradition of the British drawing room comedy, which is characterized by witty repartee among usually upper class characters and largely set in the room of a house where guests are entertained. However, this work has one major difference: its drawing room is located in Chequers, the official countryside retreat of the British PM. That’s “PM” as in Yes, Prime Minister, the West End and BBC hit by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, which is now having its U.S. debut at the Geffen Playhouse.

As such, Yes, Prime Minister’s bristling dialogue is decidedly political and full of humorous social commentary about the British power elite, plus the expediency and opportunism that characterizes affairs (figuratively and literally) of state. The barbs about the BBC, celebrity activism and what may be the first drone strike joke launched from the stage of a major play fly fast and furious in English accents. There’s something rotten in the estate at Buckinghamshire, where the PM, his advisors and the Kumranistani Ambassador have gathered at Chequers to try to navigate a path more circuitous than a slalom run in order to clinch a deal with a (fictional) oil-rich Central Asian nation that could pull the U.K. and the European Union out of the grips of recession.

The careers -- and collective asses -- of the Prime Minister and his flunkies are also on the proverbial line. As members of the political class survival of their positions -- and pensions -- are first and foremost in their thoughts, with the well-being of the British people a sometimes distant second.

The New York-born Michael McKean more than holds his own, but as Cabinet Secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby Dakin Matthews almost steals the show. Appleby is the consummate career civil servant who speaks in the bureaucratese jargon that George Orwell denounced in 1984 and his 1946 essay “Politics and the English Language,” wherein Orwell criticized politicians’ “inflated style… A mass of Latin words falls upon the facts like soft snow, blurring the outlines and covering up all the details. The great enemy of clear language is insincerity… politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred and schizophrenia.”

But keep your eyes on Sir Humphrey -- behind his funky functionary lingo he is the ultimate survivor, and he’s not about to be voted off the sceptered island. Jonathan Lynn adroitly directs his cast composed, surprisingly, mostly of Yanks, although Rogue Machine company member Ron Bottitta, who plays a cameraman and is the understudy for other roles, was born in London. The other cast members from the colonies include Jefferson Mays (a veteran of Broadway, off-Broadway and the big and little screens) as Bernard Woolley, the unctuous, eager to please goody-two-shoes Principal Private Secretary to the PM. Tara Summers (who co-starred on the tart Boston Legal TV series) excels as the younger, hipper, scheming, less scrupulous Special Advisor to the PM Claire Sutton. As the Kumranistani Ambassador Jerusalem-born Brian George (a veteran of TV sitcoms and dramas) saunters in and out of the Chequers drawing room in his slippers and robe. In a brief appearance as the BBC’s Director-General, Time Winters scores points about the relationship between the fourth estate and the state -- especially when the latter holds -- and pulls -- the purse strings. This is all the more delicious when one considers that a TV sitcom version of Yes, Prime Minister has aired on the Beeb, biting the hand that feeds it.

The single set by scenic designer Simon Higlett, a West End stalwart, seemed to this untutored eye to perfectly capture the architectural ambiance of Chequers, that rural residence that goes at least as far back as the 16th century. Sound designers Andrea Cox and John Leonard’s sound effects almost literally had me jumping out of my seat a couple of times.

Yes, Prime Minister is not a play for a nitwit -- but for those who like their wit to be Brit, sly and wry, this reviewer resoundingly votes in the affirmative. Harrumph!


Yes, Prime Minister runs through July 14 at The Geffen Playhouse, 10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood Village, CA 90024. For more information: 310-208-5454; www.GeffenPlayhouse.com

 

No comments:

Post a Comment