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Nicholas
Wright’s excellent new play is about the twenty-year-old Vincent Van Gogh when he came from Holland to work for the art dealers Goupil
and Co.
The National Theatre production transfers to Wyndham's Theatre July
29, running through October 26.. Like his earlier drama, “Cressida,”
Nicholas Wright’s latest work is based on fact, which he
imaginatively enlarges upon He has a gift for complex
characterization and sharp dialogue, as well as a sure dramatic
sense that combines humor and seriousness. Arriving in Brixton in
1873, young Vincent, whose two years there we know something about
from his letters home, lodged with a widow, Ursula Loyer, a
schoolteacher, and her daughter Eugenie. All this is fact.
Engagingly acted by Jochum Ten Haaf, who not only is Dutch, but also
looks much like the artist as a young man, Vincent is both naïve and
outspoken, shy and ready for love – with any woman. Falling madly
in love at first sight with Eugenie, but sworn to secrecy by
free-thinker Ursula because Eugenie is already having an affair with
lodger Sam (Paul Nicholls), Vincent becomes aware that he and Ursula
are soul mates: “You’re like a mirror of my despair,” he tells her.
Actually, the widow is the most
deeply drawn character in the work, and Wright provides a
many-faceted Ursula for Clare Higgins to ably explore.
Here is a lonely woman, depressed and wearing mourning for 15 years,
yet ably running her school and her household, yearning for beauty
and hoping to inspire in another the talent she can appreciate while
lacking it herself. Expertly directed by Richard Eyre, the action
is set in the kitchen of Ursula’s house, with a centuries-old table
in the center and an old-fashioned stove where real potatoes are
boiled and tea is brewed.
In Jochum Ten Haaf’s
sensitive portrayal, one can feel in the young Vincent the anger as
well as the despair that was to hound him, even as he responds to
the beauty of nature and to the plight of the poor, as mentioned in
his letters. His sketches done on a short visit home duplicate his
actual ones, and as he peels the potatoes for Ursula, one recalls
his painting of the Potato Eaters, while Ursula’s description of the
stars evokes Starry Night. The arrival of Vincent’s abrasive younger
sister Anna (Emma Handy) provides humor and exasperation for the
household, and also sets up Vincent’s abrupt departure, ordered by
his father and uncle to the Paris branch of Goupil and Co. Returning
to London three years later, Vincent finds Ursula much changed and
again in despair. He has given up art for religion, and is teaching
at a religious school. But in Wright’s final twist (let it come as
a surprise), we see Vincent back on the path he was to follow so
gloriously – and tragically – and hope for Ursula is implied.
(Wyndham's Theatre, Charing
Cross Road, London WC2H ODA. Phone: 020-7369-1796)
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