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Abbey Theatre |
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Hugh Leonard is a prolific writer with thirty-two
stage plays to his credit. A
Life was first produced
by the Abbey Theatre in 1979 and has had successful runs in cities around the world. The
Abbey Theater has revived it this summer in a delightful production that gives a new
generation of theatre-goers the opportunity to savor its humor, wisdom, and humanitysharply
and deeply felt.
A Life draws on autobiographical materials that Leonard tapped
both in his memoir, Home Before Night, and in the later play, Da. It
surely belongs to the great Irish tradition of storytelling and conveys a palpable sense
of place in the glimpses of small town life, the mores of the times, as well as the
day-to-day detailyou can almost taste the stout the men drink in the second act. But
Leonard's canny observation carries A Life beyond regional interest; this is work
of universal insight into human weaknesses and strengths, and the knotty crisscrosses of
personality and relationships.
The central character, Desmond Drumm, a civil servant nearing
retirement in 1977, thinks back to a time forty years earlier, as he seeks to mend some
frazzled relationships and sort out his past. There is a cast of eight playing four
characters, four in their youth, four now at maturity. The action shifts smoothly back and
forth between the periods, allowing memory and reality to cross-check, allowing the past
and the present to illuminate each other.
Drumm is an intelligent and scathingly witty man, whose sees his
unedited comments about others as honesty and truth, while failing to see the truth of the
pain he thus insensitively inflicts. Tirades of condescension flow from him like venom. He
calls Lar, a friend through all those years, "a man of no malice and less
merit." In their youth, they both wooed Mary; Lar won her hand. In one of the
particularly fine speeches of the play, the young Mary, played here with both passion and
humor by Fiona Glascott, explains to Desmond why she chose Lar over him. Her insight is so
clear that even Desmond must accept the reason of her choice through his hurt.
Drumm marries Dorothy, a more accommodating type, who is able to see
through Desmond's thorny exterior and admires and loves him for the virtues that shine
behind his coruscating words. Let a sentimental or cliched question be asked ("Where
has the time gone?") and Drumm is ready with the sardonic response ("Most of it
has gone to listening to banalities..."). Even his wife's infinite patience is
attacked: "Her tenderness will soak into me like damp rot."
But Drumm has discovered (as he cites G.K. Chesterton), "'The
decent inn of death' isn't decent when you see it up close. It's a kip!" as he
painfully begins to understand the consequences of his past behavior on those for whom he
cares and who care for him.
Leonard's superb ear for dialogue is well-served by the ensemble cast,
and director Ben Barnes expertly brings out the dawning realizations, the interplay of
characters, the humor, the sadness, and the multiplicity of ironies. A Life may
be an old-fashioned play, but it should never go out of style.
Dublin, August 14, 2000 - Arthur Lazere