Last fall,
while visiting London, it was a rare day when we weren’t traveling by double-decker
bus from Victoria Street, around Parliament Square, and up Whitehall to
Trafalgar Square. We’d pass the old Scotland Yard, Westminster Abbey,
Parliament, the government buildings on Whitehall, the Horse Guards Palace, and
a rather small building named Trafalgar
Studios Theatre. Playing at the time was Apologia.
We considered trying to get tickets, but they were few and far between. Certainly,
a draw (for us American tourists, at least) were two of the stars – American actress
Stockard Channing and Laura Carmichael, aka Lady Edith of Downtown Abbey fame.
So, I
bought a copy of the play script.
Apologia by playwright Alexi Kaye Campbell
is actually written in two versions, an English one and an American one. It was
the American version playing at the Trafalgar, likely to accommodate Ms.
Channing. The plays are essentially the same; the difference is the lead
character, Kristin Miller, who can be played as an American or a Brit. I read
the American version.
Miller is
something of a famous art historian, who started out her professional life as a
protester. The cause didn’t particularly matter; if she thought it could
enough, she was there. She’s now living not far from London, in a charming
cottage-like home. It is her birthday, and her two sons are coming to visit for
the party, along with their girlfriends. Neither son is particularly happy with
their mother’s newly published memoir, which doesn’t even acknowledge their
existence. She tries to explain this by saying it was a professional memoir,
but that excuse doesn’t survive for long.
As the
characters interact, the sons Peter and Simon, the girlfriends Trudi and
Claire, and Kristin’s old friend and fellow protester Hugh, it becomes clear
that this family is about both what it says and what it doesn’t say. Kristin
discovers that Peter met Trudi (an American) at a prayer meeting, and she
nearly freaks out at the idea that her son may have found faith. Simon, largely
unsuccessful at about anything he tries, is breaking up with the successful
soap-opera-star Claire. It’s clear that Kristin likes neither of the women and
almost seems to deliberately provoke them. Claire gets incensed and responds;
Trudi rather blissfully ignores the sarcasm.
Alexi Kaye Campbell |
This is a
family seething with anger and resentment, and it takes some time to see why.
Campbell
was an actor for 20 years, working for such companies as the Royal Shakespeare
Company and Hampstead Theatre, before turning to playwriting. His plays include
Death in Whitbridge (2008), The
Pride (2010), The
Faith Machine (2012), Bracken
Moor (2013), and Sunset at the
Villa Thalia (2016). Five of his plays have been collected and published as
Plays
One (2017). The Pride won
several theater awards when It was written and produced. Campbell was also the
scriptwriter for the movies Possession (2002) starring Gwyneth
Paltrow and Woman in Gold (2015),
starring Helen Mirren.
Apologia slowly builds tension; one begins
to suspect that Kristin Miller is almost on the verge of cracking and will do
(and say) anything to avoid that. She has to believe she’s in control; she
doesn’t seem to understand that her family has become the protestors and she
the central authority being protested.
Top photograph: an advertisement
for the play at Trafalgar Studios.
Interesting to have two versions in English. I do know the British have colloquial terms we don't use here but by and large I would think the themes would remain the same. - Margy
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