A magnetic
performance, as fresh, witty and relevant today as it was 35 years ago.
Educating Rita, written by Willy
Russell, is the tale of a working class hairdresser and her desire 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, designed by Patrick
Connellan – set with bookcases, piles and piles of volumes and copious bottles
of ‘hidden’ scotch – where 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 Max Roberts,
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, Stephen
Tompkinson, 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, Tompkinson 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) are 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, who gives a maestro performance. Her machine gun delivery and the typical
convoluted journeys that people love to take when trying to recount a simple
event feel comforting familiar. Her
outwardly brash attitude which belies a delicate and vulnerable core is perfect
and her journey through self awareness and realisation is magnetic. In particular, her frustration with the
constraints brought about by assumed societal positions is palpable and very
relevant to today’s approach to class and culture.
Fans of the film will not be
disappointed by this latest stage production and the standing ovation from the packed
first house was testament to the brilliance of the cast, a 5 star performance.
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