sat 30/11/2024

The Pass, Royal Court Jerwood Theatre Upstairs | reviews, news & interviews

The Pass, Royal Court Jerwood Theatre Upstairs

The Pass, Royal Court Jerwood Theatre Upstairs

Russell Tovey in a career high as a footballer at odds with his sexuality and himself

Out and about - or maybe not: Russell Tovey and Gary Carr in John Donnelly's multi-layered new playManuel Harlan

You don't have to know the difference between Dennis Wise (who is referenced during it) and Ernie Wise (who is not) to be immensely gripped by The Pass, the scorching new Royal Court play that traffics ostensibly in the world of football only to widen out into as corrosive a study in psychic implosion and self-destruction as the London theatre has seen in an age.

Factor in a star performance from onetime History Boys student Russell Tovey that this actor's career to this point has in no way suggested, and one finds an early candidate for both the most surprising production of the year and surely one of the very best, as well. All this, and in January, no less? Leave it to Tovey, author John Donnelly, and a peerless director in John Tiffany doing his best work since Black Watch to make the dog days of winter suddenly feel like spring.

Donnelly's text could be titled Three Hotels had the American author Jon Robin Baitz not got there first with a play seen some while back at the Tricycle - and if the pun so teasingly implicit in a title like The Pass weren't deftly wedded to the work at hand. The first scene, indeed, is an extended tease that finds two 17-year-old footballers, Jason (Tovey) and Ade (Gary Carr), sharing a Bulgarian hotel room on the eve of a career decision that is most likely to see one of them left by the wayside. The two, clad only in their underwear, banter and horse about and never get into their single beds when they can leap on top of them with much the same tetosterone-fueled abandon with which they seem innocently to come on to one another: a prolonged vignette that shows boys being boys - or possibly rather more than that, as well.  

Lisa McGrillis in The Pass by John DonnellyCome the second scene, we're in a Spanish hotel seven years later and Jason has become a sports star as well as husband and father, all of which hint at the ill-advised nature of his assignation with an English table dancer called Lyndsey (an excellent Lisa McGrillis, pictured right). At first sight, Lyndsey comes off as a hyper-talkative emotional and sexual pushover, but Donnelly's theatrical cunning has something altogether different in store. By scene's end, there have been so many reversals of power (with frayed nerves and flared tempers to match) that violence seems the only possible outcome. In fact, actual GBH is reserved for the third and final scene after the interval by which point Jason is an arrogant and cocksure 29-year-old who has returned home to an unnamed, deeply swanky London hotel - the sort where you find the sort of capacious TV affixed to the wall that, if you're Jason at his most heedless, you can't wait to disconnect so you can send it hurtling on to the pavement many floors below. 

What's led to this aberrant behaviour? Think of it as the love that dare not speak its name in a play in which it takes the lone female figure to first use the word ("gay") that Jason won't sanction no matter who voices it. Indeed, the character at one point gets the best I-sleep-with-men-but-I'm-not-gay outburst since Tony Kushner's comparably defensive Roy Cohn in Angels In America, and Tovey at every acutely judged turn shows the cost to Jason's own buffed but damaged self of inhabiting a lie that he knows to be not just wrong but toxic, both to himself and to those who fall prey to his most abrasive ripostes. The performance opens a window on to a living death that comes with a darkness no less profound (and, arguably, more immediate) than the one unfolding nightly on the Court mainstage in the Beckett triple-bill.

Donnelly's concerns at the same time extend beyond sexual self-denial, as evidenced by a highly disturbing last half-hour that introduces a fourth character (newcomer Nico Mirallegro, pictured left with Tovey, in fine form as a bellboy whose determined good cheer is sorely tested) that tilts the play in the direction of Laura Wade's Posh. Summoning to his suite his onetime pal Ade, who has since chucked in football and found a - yes - boyfriend, Jason offers up a shared vision of a new life for him and Ade that is clearly not to be, prompting a vision of himself as the hollow man that leads directly to a laying waste of the world around him. Ratcheting the tension up yet further, Tiffany's razor-sharp production saves the final sting for the last line, not to be revealed here. Let's just say that in Jason's cosseted world of high-end celebrity, a seemingly innocuous offer can mark the most wounding of all blows to the heart.

 

What's led to this aberrant behaviour? Think of it as the love that dare not speak its name

rating

Editor Rating: 
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)

Share this article

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

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