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Flawed but fascinating look at a difficult subject
THE POISON MAKER
The Old Red Lion by RONAN MURPHY
THE Alchemy Theatre Companys production of John Symonds period piece The Poison Maker is a fascinating but flawed examination
of the relationship between a son and his bohemian single mother,
set in London of the early 1900s.
The play centres on the character of Felix, a young man who
is the connection between two families, the first of which is
the close unit of himself and his mother Pansy. The play focuses
on how his introduction to his fathers family sparks off
a complex set of responses among the entire cast.
Although based on a true story, The Poison Maker is rooted heavily
in surrealism. The cast employ a stylised, exaggerated form
of acting that is a fine complement to the barbed wit of Symondss
script. The characters engage in extraordinarily frank conversation,
which is often used to good humorous effect, particularly in
the acidic exchanges between Steven Blakes Mr Tegg and
his wife Florence, played by director Viki Carpenter.
James Oliver Wheatley does well in the difficult role of Felix,
a young man consumed by Oedipal struggles, in which all the
women in the play appear to take on different aspects of the
strong mother figure that he is dominated by. Unfortunately,
this intriguing aspect of the play is often lost in what is
an unashamedly self-indulgent and bloated script. The plays
sub-plots often lapse into incoherency and are left without
resolution.
However, the striking thing about The Poison Maker is how a
play with many faults has so much to recommend it.
Although over-long, it is funny, absorbing and offers a fascinating
look into the nature of the relationships between mothers and
sons.
Until February 18
020 7837 7816
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