Gay love story throws in romance, heartbreak, and the kitchen sink
Brokeback Mountain is the heartbreaking story of a forbidden love that lasts a lifetime. And the stage version by Ashley Robinson, based on the original short story by Annie Proulx, is excellent at conveying both its romance and its anguish. Unfortunately, it has also ended my love affair with Sohoplace Theatre.
My disappointment wasn’t with the play itself or the acting or the songs . It was with the production. As you may know from my enthusiastic reviews of Medea and Marvellous, Sohoplace is a theatre in the round, but it seemed like this production had been designed for a studio theatre but had had to settle for Sohoplace while still being in denial that the audience is on all four sides there.
When you perform a show in the round, you need to keep at least one actor facing the audience as much as possible but the unquestionably talented director Jonathan Butterell – he directed Everybody’s Talking About Jamie– took some strange decisions.
For example, the two main protagonists regularly huddle in one corner of the stage by a camp fire with their back to two thirds of the audience. A tent, blocks some sight lines for a while. The production even throws in a kitchen sink. The latter rises from the floor on one side of the stage for a number of domestic scenes and blocks the view for those of us on that side (Stalls row A low numbers). One of my friends who was at the performance said he felt he’d seen a good play about plumbing. And I still don’t know who Ennis’ wife Alma remarried.
Then again, I had a great view of the pained looks passing between Ennis and Alma as they stood at the sink, which three-quarters of the audience must have missed. Tom Pye is the brilliant award-winning designer of My Neighbour Totoro but, on this occasion, his set seemed to ignore the needs of an in-the-round production.
I can’t say who in particular was responsible but I do feel somebody should have looked at this production from all angles and pointed out the restricted views. That’s assuming the producers care whether people who’ve paid good money to see the show can actually see the show. (And, yes, I did buy my ticket.)
Well-crafted, superbly acted
You will almost certainly be familiar with the story, thanks to the film. Two cowboys Jack and Ennis are assigned the job of looking after a flock of sheep on a remote mountain. They gradually get to know and like one another until one cold night, they huddle together in a tent, and desire takes over. Nothing untoward about that except this is Wyoming in 1963, a time and place where Homosexuality is not only illegal but liable to get you killed.
This explains why neither admits their homosexuality until their bodies touch. Here and now, gay love stories are commonplace but even today a gay man will have come across prejudice and threats, and it’s a timely moment to be reminded of the effect of homophobia, given the rise in legal discrimination against homosexuality in some US states, and the introduction of the death penalty in Uganda for what the law calls ‘aggravated homosexuality’.
Although Jack suggests they could live together, Ennis holds back, trying to maintain a sham marriage, but lives for occasional meetings with Jack in remote places. I’m assuming you’ve seen the film or read the story so I can say Jack takes more risks than Ennis and with disastrous consequences. Ashley Robinson tells their story with a deep understanding and a superb ear for dialogue. It’s hard to believe this is his theatrical debut.
The two handsome American actors wear their parts like gloves. I felt their love and their pain.
Mike Faist with crooked good looks and ready smile is the reckless extrovert Jack. Lucas Hedges is the nervous, taciturn Ennis. They are totally believable as an affectionate couple: I remember a head resting casually on a chest that caught perfectly the comfort lovers experience in each other’s company.
Emily Fairn was convincing as Ennis’s bemused and badly done by wife, another victim of the situation who is by turns sad, understanding and angry.
I wasn’t sure about the presence of an older Ennis. He does appear in the prologue to the short story, to kick it off as it were, but I was puzzled by his continuing appearances on stage, without giving any commentary. It may have been a way of making clear that Ennis had never come out, so his only love was Jack, but, in practice, like the sink, he just got in the way.
There was a kind of commentary in Dan Gillespie Sells’ songs. You may know his work with The Feeling or his music for Everybody’s Talking About Jamie. Here he echoes American country and western music, with songs that are plaintive and full of deep emotion. Providing a moving counterpoint to the onstage action, they are beautifully performed by Eddi Reader and the slightly off stage band (at least they didn’t get in the way!).
Brokeback Mountain is a well-crafted, superbly acted play. I would love to have seen more of it.
Brokeback Mountain runs at sohoplace until 12 August 2023.
@sohoplace is the first new West End theatre to open in the last 50 years. That would be exciting news in itself but @sohoplace is primarily a theatre-in-the-round, which can provide the most intimate, electrifying kind of theatre. And, as an unexpected bonus, the restaurant is first class.
The new theatre is part of Soho Place, a major new development close to the junction of Charing Cross Road and Tottenham Court Road. Wonderfully, the planning authority Westminster City council insisted that a theatre should be part of this development.
It looks like many modern glass office blocks from the outside but the inside is a revelation. Everywhere you look are constellations of stars twinkling against a dark blue background. Curving white marble staircases, evoking the birthplace of theatre Ancient Greece, take you up to stalls level, then to balconies one and two. Each level is identical, unlike so many theatres where people in the cheap seats are made to feel inferior. Each has a bar and loos with, hurrah, lots of women’s toilets.
And that glass I mentioned means you have many opportunities to look out onto the bright lights of London.
Inside the auditorium, there are 602 seats in all. The configuration is flexible but it was designed with theatre-in-the-round in mind, and I hope we’ll see lots more productions using this arrangement. Certainly Marvellous and the next two productions As You Like It and Medea are in the round.
The sightlines are excellent: we’re told no member of the audience will be more than six rows away from the action, so you really will be able to see every detail. I was in the front row for Marvellous, which was a mixed blessing. I was thrilled by the proximity to the actors, but I think I might have preferred to be further back, so that I didn’t have to look quite so much to left and right.
On the ground floor are the Stars restaurant and bar. You can enjoy a cocktail or, better still, have a meal. My party of four ate there and all of us loved our food and the selection of drinks. I’m not a restaurant critic, so I’m not going to go into detail, just to say the dishes were imaginative, tasty, beautifully cooked and good value. The staff, not only the restaurant staff but all the Front of house team, were efficient, helpful and welcoming. The restaurant is open even when the theatre is closed and I can tell you I intend to go there whenever I’m in the area looking for somewhere to eat.
So, congratulations to Nica Burns, the owner of @SohoPlace, and her team for a terrific achievement and a welcome addition to London’s West End.