Skip to main content

Review: A pint of Pinter.

Does it kind of hurt you, too, that that doesn't rhyme? Yeah, me neither. Yup. Totally.

A couple of weeks ago, I went to see two plays by Harold Pinter--The Lover and The Collection--put on by the Shakespeare Theatre Company, and it was a pretty damn great experience. Overall.

A caveat before digging in: These were my first Pinter plays in performance. I've only really ever read him before, although I did once perform a scene from Betrayal for a class. (I was, of course, spectacular in the role.) So it's hard, then, for me to speak much to Pinter as a whole or to how these plays and their staging that particular night stack up. But I'll do what I can.

What I like about Pinter is how twisty and intellectual he is. He's not necessarily intellectual in the way Tom Stoppard is, to be sure, but there's something almost... mathematical about him, or so it's seemed to me.

Take Betrayal, for example. There's something almost clockwork about how it unwinds. It's not, however, inhuman. It at least reads with feeling, by my estimation. Tell me, are you looking forward to our trip to Torcello? In that play, he balanced a sort of politics with passion in a way I couldn't quite put my finger on.

Watching The Lover and The Collection, I saw some of that and was reminded of something my professor had said about Pinter (and was probably plagiarized rudely by the show's program): It's about who's in control at each point in any scene. I think that tells part of the Pinter story, but not all of it; it accounts for a mechanism but not the motion.

Something about these plays, though, seemed off. I think it's because they lacked a balance of those politics and passion elements I saw in Betrayal: all politics, here, with no passion or too little.

The control thing was quite apparent, even flaunted, in these plays, like seams that hadn't been sewn in quite right. Given these were earlier plays, it's arguable he hadn't yet gotten the balance right. Furthermore--or perhaps because of the bare mechanism grinding its gears for all to see--the characters didn't feel quite real; a bit stilted, stale; unresonant: They felt more like figures in a diorama than people with lives and hearts.

That being said, the plays were hardly unenjoyable or uninteresting; Pinter's intellectualism was as engaging as ever. The Lover was a fascinating exploration of passion gone sideways and wayward, as confused by itself as ignited; it was a twisty journey of parlaying the truth with hurt spite through the interstices of love (or...?). The Collection was a fabulous epistemological conflation of passion and reality--but could it...?--denying its own truth, if I will permit the baldly postmodernist interpretation, immediately both explicitly and implicitly.

But, then, I am an English major. Yet I am also a philosopher, so I have to ask: Were they good plays? Well, that's a bit tougher than spewing literary criticism--and not just because it's hard to define a "good play." I did enjoy the experience; I enjoy going to the theatre--even if the play is terrible--but this occasion was something more than that admittedly low bar.

I've seen better, to be sure, but these were well-constructed plays. They more or less successfully conveyed and arguably achieved their respective thrusts in an interesting way that left me thinking. I may not have been as enthralled by the performance as I have been by other plays I've attended, but this is an important, if vague, criterion.

I saw a play once that struggled to convey its thrust, nevermind achieve an exploration of and argument for it. While it also left me thinking, it was more a case of preoccupation with its flaws than consideration of its messages. It wasn't until nearly a year later that I really appreciated its message, but not by virtue of the play's execution. Such a play is an awful play; these were not awful plays.

Comments

Other things that might interest you...

On aging, and fear.

To begin with, I’m not sure you’re aware of it, but I’m middle aged. Oh? What gave it away? Using a blog as my primary literary medium?¹ Hm. But in fact, the APA defines 35 years as the end of “young adulthood.” Yeah. I found out via some shitpost on twitter when I was already 35, so it didn’t sit well with me then either. But my worries about aging began much sooner than that. See, even in my 20s, I feared I’d been wasting my life. I’d struggled with school and life and everything since graduating high school, arguably sooner, and nothing seemed to be going anywhere meaningful . I felt I had a limited social life, a dead-end job, no money, no great travels, a limping love life; I was, generally, a loser, wasting away... There were none of the usual hallmarks of success or happiness. And that scared me. Would my life have been worth it if I continued in this direction? Would it have been a “life well lived” by the end? So, this is my existential struggle. Even now, as I lurch ever nea...

Changing lanes.

I was driving home in some traffic last night when I drifted, in my mind, a long way back (about 20 years) to high school. I was caught in one of those periodic traffic slowdowns as I floated back; you know, those waves of congestion that seem to pass backward through the columns of cars in each lane. (I've heard they start because someone switches lanes, and in response, a rippling emergent slowness travels backward and outward as the cars behind it accommodate the change, one by one.) What drew me back to those younger days was that, back in high school, similar phenomena of congestion took place in the halls between classes, when eddies of young humans would get caught in and around those clumps of those chatting by lockers or retrieving books. Occasionally, backups would occur when groups of people got caught in these eddies, or collided with other groups by the lockers, and slowdowns would ripple back from there. Maybe it's not exactly the same, but as I drove it seemed si...

Oatmeal is tasty.

{slurps up berry-oatmeal-deliciousness} Indeed. I need to work on rebuilding a morning schedule. I can be zombie-like enough that I'll waste a perfectly good morning, and have often slept through many. And, really, it's such a useful time of day.