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Review: Lucky Break

Thespian saga that fails to entertain

April 21, 2011 12:02
All the stage’s a world - of magic, make-believe and make-up

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By Esther Freud
Bloomsbury, £11.99

There are some superb books about the actor's life. Antony Sher's The Year of the King is a riveting account of playing Richard III in the famous 1984 RSC production. Simon Callow's Being an Actor follows his early career from the letter to Olivier that led him to his first job, to his acclaimed performance as Mozart in the original Amadeus. More recently, Michael Simkins's What's My Motivation? is a comic gem.

Simkins is quoted at the beginning of Esther Freud's seventh novel: "Advice to a young actor starting out: 'It's not fair, and don't be late.'" Enjoy it; you won't find anything as funny or clever in the 300 pages that follow.

Lucky Break tells the story of a group of young actors over a decade-and-a-half, from drama school through the agonies of auditions, finding an agent and screen tests, to the triumphs and failures that follow. It's a world Esther Freud knows well. After an itinerant childhood, famously recalled in Hideous Kinky, the novel that made her name, she came to London at 16 to go to drama school, worked as an actress and later married the actor David Morrissey.