thu 28/03/2024

The Kid Stays in the Picture, Royal Court, review – ‘sad, bad and sprawling’ | reviews, news & interviews

The Kid Stays in the Picture, Royal Court, review – ‘sad, bad and sprawling’

The Kid Stays in the Picture, Royal Court, review – ‘sad, bad and sprawling’

Cut! Simon McBurney muddles the story of Hollywood mogul Robert Evans

Show don’t tell: Christian Camargo and Heather Burns in ‘The Kid Stays in the Picture’. Bill Knight for theartsdesk

The beauty of fiction is that its stories have both compelling shape and deep meaning – they are dramas where things feel right and true and real. The trouble with real life is that it’s the opposite: it is messy, frequently shapeless and often meaningless.

So, at the Royal Court, Simon McBurney’s adaptation (with help from co-director James Yeatman) of the autobiography of 1970s Hollywood mogul Robert Evans is a hazardous venture. Evans was once one of the hottest producers in Tinseltown, responsible for multi-million-dollar hits such as Love Story, The Godfather and Chinatown; then this all-American hero becomes a zero as he hits the buffers in the 1980s.

Not only a bad play, but a sad evening in the theatre

McBurney takes this story, which Evans himself chronicled in 1994 in an award-winning book, The Kid Stays in the Picture (a reference to his early job as a very young actor), and turns it into a sprawling epic whose ambition is to tell a personal tale that goes hand-in-hand with the story of a nation. Of the American Dream. At the same time, his desire is to give it a technically sophisticated staging with live camera work, shadow play and clips from classic films. Sadly, despite a postponement of the play’s opening for a week, McBurney has not had enough time to make any of this work. The result is not only a bad play, but a sad evening in the theatre.

Evans’s story is not without its interest. Born Robert J Shapera, he was the son of a Jewish dentist, and began his career by working with his brother, selling women’s fashion. Spotted by veteran actor Norma Shearer, he played her husband Irving Thalberg in the bio-pic Man with a Thousand Faces. Unable to shine as a star, Evans became a producer, and his mercilessly hard graft helped save Paramount Pictures from bankruptcy. Then his workaholic lifestyle took a nosedive as he became a coke head, was accused of drug possession, got involved as a potential witness in a murder case, and fell out with his wife, Ali MacGraw (star of Love Story). Phew. And if that’s hard to follow, try watching the play.

Along the way, Evans meets Henry Kissinger, gets hilarious mumbling phone calls from Marlon Brando, falls out with various other Hollywood big cheeses, and name checks more than a dozen famous names, from Ava Gardner to Jack Nicholson. Ironically, for a play that twice features his dictum that “the story is the star”, all this is told in a mess and meander of flashbacks, endless narration and unclear scenes that either crawl at the most pedestrian pace, or buzz with unclear detail. Added to this is the staging, which simply doesn’t work: the stage picture is confused, the theatricality is juvenile (every air trip is illustrated by an actor carrying a toy plane) and the storytelling lacks clarity and point. So although this show boasts a raft of big-shot producers, including Barbara Broccoli (who along with her brother has produced eight Bond films) and Complicite theatre company, and seems to have a Broadway transfer in its sights, this smells like a flop to me.

The company – led by Christian Camargo as Evans (pictured above) and Heather Burns as MacGraw – share the pages and pages of narrative, and play the dozens of characters. They pose for moments from famous films, and occasionally even act a little bit. But just a little bit. The result is technically complex, but not very attractive. And while we can all appreciate that a producer’s life is all about making phone calls, must a play about it be crammed with them? Ring, ring, ring. It’s enough to drive you mad. Basically, this play is a mess. And a long mess at that. It is clichéd in its choice of music, banal as a Californian self-help manual in its choice of quotes from Evans’s wisdom, and muddled in its vision. On the night I saw it, there was a technical breakdown in Act One, a perfect judgement on the hubristic nature of this ill-conceived enterprise. How I wish the Royal Court had stuck to fiction. After all, it is supposed to be a playwright’s theatre.

The stage picture is confused, the theatricality is juvenile and the storytelling lacks clarity and point

rating

Editor Rating: 
2
Average: 2 (1 vote)

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Comments

We saw this play on March 23rd and completely disagree with this review. Admittedly our hearts sank when we saw 5 actors at mics at the opening, and we wondered if this was going to be a radio play in disguise. It was not. And some miracle of theatrical coordination must have occurred in the week between the reviewer's experience and ours. The staging served to emphasise the frenetic pace of Evans's life, but at no time was the narrative masked by the multiple activities on stage. It was gripping theatre.

I heartily agree with Susan Auty. Saw the play last Saturday matinee & it was excellent. Plot, structure, characterisation all beautifully put together and acted. Big shout also to the Stage Manager who held it all together so smoothly and adeptly. "Banal as a Californian Self-Help manual." I think Aleks Sierz may care to dip into one such "Feel The Fear" and check out the banality-quotient. If Aleks is so against adaptations from real life what on earth did he make of Lucy Prebble's "ENRON" ?

I also saw this at the Saturday matinee and, while it lacks the intellectual profundity that lies behind Complicite's best work, it was a very enjoyable and slickly produced show.

I could not disagree more with this review.Saw it this evening and what an incredible production - brave technically brilliant and very funny five stars plus

It was a bit underwhelming, not Complicite at its best. I felt interested, but detached and occasionally confused.

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