mon 04/11/2024

Labour of Love, Noël Coward Theatre, review - Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig labour in vain | reviews, news & interviews

Labour of Love, Noël Coward Theatre, review - Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig labour in vain

Labour of Love, Noël Coward Theatre, review - Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig labour in vain

Comedy about Labour Party history is starry, but tediously overblown

Red in-fighting: Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig in ‘Labour of Love’.Johan Persson

Prolific playwright James Graham aspires to be nothing if not timely.

His latest, a play about the Labour Party, was originally due to open during the week of that party’s conference, when our ears were once again ringing to the chant of “Oh, Jeremy Corbyn!” Unfortunately, the play’s TV star Sarah Lancashire had to pull out, so its West End opening was delayed until tonight. Her replacement, Tamsin Greig, joins Martin Freeman in this epic comedy about a Labour MP in an era of change. It’s a starry cast, but does the play’s content live up to its billing?

Opening with familiar chords of the White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army”, Labour of Love (geddit?) tells the story of David Lyons, a young Yorkshire-born but Oxford-educated candidate who gets Ashfield, a safe Labour seat in 1990. Because his wife Elizabeth, a lawyer friend of Cherie Blair and with an embarrassingly metropolitan accent, isn’t keen on doing constituency work, David persuades Jean Whittaker, wife of the retiring MP, to carry on as his election agent. Over the next 27 years, we watch the ups and downs of his life as a Blairite MP, and his arguments with his more leftwing colleagues, and especially with the feisty Jean.

Greig looks uncomfortable in the role of a lefty true believer

The first scene, which is set in 2017, alerts us immediately to the play’s central gimmick: the story is told backwards, jumping from one significant milestone to another. So we watch the Miliband years, the Blair years and the Kinnock years, helped by Duncan McLean’s video footage of Labour Party history. Of course, it helps to know the story, and to be familiar with Clause Four and the Militant Tendency. If you aren’t, never mind, there are plenty of humorous barbs about an MP’s daily life: listening to complaints about dog shit, or getting caught claiming expenses for a gold bath plug. Some of the potty-mouthed exchanges are definitely funny.

In the second half, Graham re-runs the story, cleverly filling in some of the emotional background that was absent in the first half. It is a tale of loss, missed opportunities and betrayal and disappointment – a stereotypical Labour story. As the play’s title suggests, this is also a love story. One that doesn’t run smooth. Its late flowering feels a bit contrived, especially as the playwright seems to imply that the feelings of David and Jean are a metaphor for a way forward for the party. The future, he argues, can only come from a fusion of left and right, which is a disappointingly bland (I’m tempted to say Blairite) conclusion to a very long evening.

Near the end, there’s a neat twist to the storytelling, although the play lacks drama, has several dull stretches and is only fitfully funny. The writing works best delivering one-liners, and very rarely catches fire. Lee Newby’s set is cramped and uninspired, and Jeremy Herrin’s production is workmanlike rather than thrilling. Okay, we get two stars who are on stage for the whole evening: Freeman plays the centre-grounded David with the slightly bewildered look of a new boy at school, while Greig looks uncomfortable in the role of a lefty true believer — her heart is not in it.

In the minor roles, Rachael Stirling (Elizabeth), Susan Wokoma (an activist) and Dickon Tyrrell (another Labour activist) never really have the chance to shine. Freeman gets all the best political lines, and the play as a whole feels like a compensatory massage for all bruised centrists and Blairite nostalgics. It is never deep enough emotionally, never profound enough politically and never funny enough to repay your interest. It will appeal to Labour history buffs, and some party members. For the rest, Labour of Love will feel like hard labour.

@AleksSierz

There’s a neat twist to the storytelling, although the play lacks drama, has dull stretches and is only fitfully funny

rating

Editor Rating: 
2
Average: 2 (1 vote)

Share this article

Comments

So right - boring, not funny, a bad subject for theatre, might have worked on TV. I saw people leaving before the interval. It's been vastly overhyped.

Add comment

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters