Become a Member
Theatre

Review: Before the Party

Family falling apart farcically

April 15, 2013 10:45
Alex Price and Katherine Parkinson offending middle-class sensibilities (Photo: Keith Pattison)

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

1 min read

Any play that conjures the line, “I’ve got a kitchen full of prostitutes and Nazis”, has to have something going for it. In Rodney Ackland’s post-war, Surrey-set family drama, in which the mantle of respectability enjoyed by the highly middle-class Skinner family cracks and then disintegrates, the line of dialogue arises out of a sub-plot concerning the family’s (off-stage) German cook and Jewish housekeeper.

They don’t get on, and the former, whose fascist views are as plain as that of Sunderland FC’s new manager, has locked the latter, who used to hang out with American GIs and would do so again given half a chance, in a kitchen cupboard.

Farce mingles with something darker, and Matthew Dunster’s production is unsure which of these tones to strike. So we get plenty of both.

The plot proper, based on a Somerset Maugham short story, centres on the eldest of the Skinners’ three daughters, Laura (The IT Crowd star Katherine Parkinson), whose relationship with well-spoken, dissolute, David (played with high style by Alex Price), is deemed to be unseemly in the extreme by her parents, Aubrey and Blanche.

Editor’s picks