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Theatre

Interview: Patrick Marber

I'm a Jew first, Englishman second

July 30, 2015 13:32
Patrick Marber

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

4 min read

Although we can't see it from where we are standing, the National Theatre's huge electronic display has Patrick Marber's name up in lights. "A new play by Patrick Marber" it says, which could be referring either to The Red Lion, his first play in to be staged in eight years and set in the grubby changing room of a down-at-heel football club, or Three Days in the Country taken from the 1855 Turgenev classic about summer love (A Month in the Country), which opened this week. Starring John Simm and Mark Gatiss within a cast of 18, it's the biggest production Marber has directed.

"I'm not a smoker," he says as he lights up. "I just have the odd one since I started working here." By 'here' he means the National of course. There can be very few writers who have had two works performed at the same time.

"I'm having an incredible year," he admits in a believe-that-and-you'll-believe-anything kind of way that is the closest Marber gets to sounding positive. But it's true, this a good year. Not that there haven't been good years before. His stellar rise in comedy with The Day Today and as the co-creator of Alan Partridge were followed by plays - Dealer's Choice and Closer - which, for many, marked him out as the most talented dramatist of his generation. But compared to the last seven years or so, which were defined largely by his writers' block, things are looking up.

We are standing on a National Theatre terrace overlooking the Thames. The sky is the colour of the river's swill and through the drizzle to our right St Paul's still somehow lords it over the much taller buildings surrounding it. Somewhere between Wren's dome and the Barbican's towers is Marber's home where he has been living since moving back to London after his "finding his inner farmer" period in rural Sussex, where he raised pigs and sheep.