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Humble Boy
Charlotte Jones’s “Humble Boy” is London’s latest new
play to attain the status of an unqualified hit that will be moving to the
West End, that is, on conclusion of its sold-out run at the National
Theatre’s Cottesloe. A serious comedy – or a comic tragedy – it gracefully
combines astrophysics with family squabbles, and Hamlet with bee-keeping.
Simon Russell Beale, who recently finished a
much-applauded stint as Hamlet, impressively
plays Felix Humble, whose name
is the antithesis of his condition. Astrophysicist Felix returns to the Cotswolds from Cambridge University to attend the funeral of his father, a
biologist and beekeeper, only to discover that his mother is having an
affair with a detested neighbor, George. Diana Rigg is outstanding as
Felix’s elegant and self-centered mother Flora, in black sunglasses and
smooth blonde hair, very much the queen bee who expects all to serve her
wishes, while she gives back nothing. Brooding and unhappy, Felix is
searching for the unifying or “string” theory that holds things together,
that “explains everything,” yet he cannot understand what is happening
around him, including his fathering a child with a past lover, Rosie,
George’s daughter.
Grieving for his father and dramatizing himself, Felix
at the same time (like Hamlet) is intelligent, witty, and cynical. But
unlike Hamlet, he has no mission; he understands the theory of relativity
and that of the big bang, but he considers himself a failure. The solution
he seeks evades him out there in the cosmos, even as the people annoy him
in the garden setting by Tim Hatley, composed of long grasses dominated by
a giant beehive. Some of the play is lofty and poetic, while some is
farcical, like the luncheon at which Flora announces her engagement; a
highlight is the disposition of the father’s ashes, contained in an antique
honeypot, in the gazpacho prepared by their well-meaning friend.
The characters are an actor’s dream: drawn in depth,
complex and imaginatively conceived. In addition to the brilliantly
realized roles of Felix and Flora, the rest of the cast is outstanding:
Denis Quilley as the suitor Felix detests, Marcia Warren as the
anything-but-helpful friend, Cathryn Bradshaw as Rosie, and William Gaunt
as a mysterious gardener whose identity is revealed at the end. |