A magnetic
performance, as fresh, witty and relevant today as it was 35 years ago.
Educating Rita, written by Willy
Russel, is the tale of a working class hairdresser and her striving to break
free from her everyday existence by taking an Open University course in English
Literature. Her tutor, Frank, is a long
in the tooth, cantankerous alcoholic lecturer whose disdain for the modern approach
to learning is only bettered by his hatred for an empty bottle of scotch. Indeed, Frank only agrees to take on an Open
University student in order to pay for his bottles of booze and yet, very
quickly he sees in Rita a freshness, an unsullied mind and an unpretentiousness
that challenges his jaded and tainted outlook on life.
As a play, this two hander is solely
performed from the confines of Frank’s study – set with bookcases, piles and
piles of volumes and copious bottles of ‘hidden’ scotch, yet even the simplest
of props, the study door, the waste paper bin, the flower vases are all
cleverly used to create a richness to the interaction between student and
teacher. Brilliantly directed by Rebecca Frecknall, you aren’t so much drawn
into this world as sucked headlong and enveloped so deep I could swear you
could taste the dust and smell the must.
Playing Frank, Patrick Driver (Silent
Witness, Call the Midwife) gives a masterful appreciation of the abject
resolution that at some point in life “is this it?” seems to be the most oft
used phrase, even if it is in self-denigration. Challenged by Rita’s unbridled hunger to
learn, he portrays both tutor and father figure with equal amounts of paternal
care and longing to be young again.
Indeed, Driver brings a lot more of a father figure to the role than
merely a university lecturer. The
journey he takes us on is akin to a parent watching their offspring move from
wide eyed 13 year old starting out on secondary education (and asking questions
on everything) to the know-it-all 18 year old who sees their parent as merely a
hindrance. His frustrations towards the
end (and the increased drinking that accompanied them) were not borne from Rita’s
changing attitudes so much as Franks inability to accept his work was done.
Rita (or Susan as is her real
name) is played by Jessica Johnson, local born and boy have we got ourselves a
star in the North East. The original
Rita was a Liverpudlian, broad scouse, but Jessica’s portrayal is all North
East and it is testament to her delivery that the character is all the better
for it. The way Jessica uses her local
style of talking, the machine gun delivery and the typical convoluted journeys
that we love to take people on when trying to recount a simple event felt like
being wrapped in a warm proggy mat. Her
outwardly brash attitude which belied a delicate and vulnerable core was there
for all to see and so well balanced that her whole performance was magnetic.
Huge kudos to the Gala, Durham
for producing an amazing piece of theatre and a real treat – congratulations to
Director Rebecca Frecknall and her team, and to the management and marketing at
the Gala theatre for a fabulous evening and a perfect example of why the Gala
Theatre has so much to offer.
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