PRIVATE LIVES

Steve John Shepherd and Jill Halfpenny as Elyot and Amanda in Private Lives at The Royal Exchange Theatre.
Image credit: Johan Persson

Written by Noel Coward

Directed by Blanche McIntyre

Royal Exchange Theatre

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The wonderfully acerbic sparring of a Noel Coward play will always ensure at least a semi decent night out at the theatre. This new production by Blanche McIntyre rises to the top like a perfectly placed olive in a good Martini. However it perhaps offers one that leaves the audience more stirred than shaken. Here the warring couples may deftly fire their insults but ultimately McIntyre never allows the barbs and violence to descend into palpable danger. It is perhaps telling that by the end, the stage is littered with uncrushed grapes and dainty rolls of cold meat instead of shards of glass and broken ashtrays.

The interplay between Steve John Shepherd and Jill Halfpenny as the couple locked into this love/hate relationship is capable of sparkling like a well cut diamond that can slice through glass but stops short of inciting the full horror of domestic cruelty. Shepherd is excellent dropping comic lines and acerbic asides with perfect timing. All laconic, louche style that perfectly evokes a rakish matinee-idol of the period, he is simply a joy to watch. Jill Halfpenny gives a more inscrutable study of Amanda, at times cool and emotionally distant, then full of kittenish charm before she unleashes some formidable claws. They make for an attractive pairing but their onstage chemistry does not always convince as a couple who can neither live together or be apart.

The unfortunate other spouses in this messy marital ménagerie are Victor and Sybil. Daniel Miller is a perfect foil as the dependable but stuffy “cotton wool Englishman” who embarks on the honeymoon from hell as his bride elopes with her ex and he ends up lumbered with the hysterical Sybil. Shazia Nicholls certainly leans into the shrewish dramatics of an abandoned bride but never fully convinces as the naive young bride wed to an older dashing suitor. The costume designs are on point for the period but somehow make this bride look rather matronly beside the older but much more stylish Amanda. In the final scene Miller finally unravels and rather like Basil Faulty and his very own Sybil, the two spurned partners descend into the marital mayhem as Elyot and Amanda sit back and watch gleefully like tricoteuses at the guillotine.

Image credit: Johan Persson

The set design by Dick Bird perfectly evokes the style and class of the world as seen by Coward. Sleek chrome gleams alongside the sharp black and white decor in the first half while a cosy but messily chic Parisienne apartment is the setting for the couples second attempt at domestic bliss. Both effectively serve a production in the round to illustrate the ring of a wedding band and the circular pattern of a couple locked in the hamster wheel of a toxic relationship. There are however some issues with this revolving set. It can be highly effective in providing some high points of theatrical drama as it moves to the emotional tempo of the production but it is highly frustrating if you end up at other points with half the performers faces obscured by parts of the set.

Private Lives is stylish, intermittently sharp, but ultimately too well-behaved for a play that should leave scorch marks. The laughs are guaranteed given Coward’s ability to write snappy dialogue that still entertains. Yet when violence erupts it fails to shock and gets watered down into clumsy antics where the only truly lasting damage is inflicted on the grand piano. In a modern world so keenly aware of the lasting harm of physical and psychological domestic abuse, McIntyre may feel compelled to be well-behaved and mindful but Coward’s original text was never intended to be morally sanitised.

Royal Exchange Theatre 27th March- 2nd May 2026

A Taste Of Honey

Rowan Robinson as Jo and Jill Halfpenny as Helen in A Taste Of Honey at The Royal Exchange Theatre
Image credit: Johan Persson

Written by Shelagh Delaney

Directed by Emma Baggott

ROYAL EXCHANGE THEATRE

This revival of the classic kitchen sink drama A Taste Of Honey by Director Emma Baggott is clearly a fan girl love letter to Shelagh Delaney and her beloved Salford. Impassioned and vibrant, the women that Delaney wrote at age 19, burst unto the stage unapologetically flawed and unflinchingly forthright. The men here are secondary whether callous or kind, they are merely there as supporting roles in the women’s stories. Over sixty years on and this story of impoverished, working class women still has the capacity to shock. Today there may be more choices and acceptance around homosexuality and race but the cost of living crisis is still leaving families on the breadline, reproductive rights are under threat and sky rocketing rents and greedy landlords have families living in accommodation every bit as grim as this Salford maisonette.

Designer Peter Butler has really accentuated the dreamy realism of A Taste Of Honey. There are all the authentic looking furnishings of a sparse, shabby rented flat with few touches of homeliness but suspended above the bleakness is a vast construction that can illuminate the space with fairground bulbs. Like a skeleton of a carousel it looms over the stage with echoes of the Salford gasworks and when illuminated by Lighting Designer Simisola Majekodumni there is the  sudden warm glow of endless possibilities in this usually drab environment.

Image credit: Johan Persson

Jill Halfpenny epitomises all the restless dissatisfaction of Helen with her casual disregard of her teenage daughter Jo and her unflinching focus on her own survival. She is a she wolf with scant maternal instincts incapable of loving either wisely or well. Halfpenny oozes the kind of tough, gritty sensuality reminiscent of the great Elsie Tanner in Coronation Street. She truly is an overblown rose ripe for the picking and full of thorns as daughter Jo is just blossoming and already sprouting her own defensive prickly thorns.

This thorny relationship is harshly devisive as both women battle for survival and supremacy. Rowan Robinson gives Jo moments of vulnerability fitted to this child woman who finds herself pregnant and repeatedly abandoned by those who could and should do better. Recognising a mother who had so much love for others and none for me she fleetingly tests love and rejects it. Robinson is the sparky and stroppy teenage girl capable of  giving as good as she gets but there are moments in certain exchanges such as when she flirts with her new stepfather that can seem slightly off kilter. Scenes with an excellent David Moorst as Geoffrey are beautifully executed as she plays house with this young gay man and seems destined to play out the patterns of her own deeply flawed Mother.

Rowan Robinson as Jo and David Moorst as Geoffrey in A Taste Of Honey at Royal Exchange
Image credit: Johan Persson

Moorst gives an intense and brittle performance that perfectly encapsulates the grief of a young gay man in The Sixties who realises he will never get the family life and children he craves. Andrew Sheridan as Peter is his polar opposite as the younger man who thinks he can buy love and then casually discard it like a sweet wrapper in the gutter.

There is much to love in this production but like its characters there are flaws. There are moments when performers are hard to hear which is less due to them and more about the staging. The positioning slightly off stage of the bed for instance allows for a very intimate experience for certain seats but means that a few scenes occur with quite a restricted experience for much of the audience. Overall it is rich and vibrant production pulsing with all the passion Delaney imbued her original script with. The  arrangement by Alexandra Faye Braithwaite and the use of Nishla Smith as the  jazz singer who weaves in melodies such as Dirty Old Town written about post-war  Salford by Ewan MacColl are perfect. The silent observing of every scene by Smith punctuated by her glorious etheral singing is the glue that pulls together this collection of lost souls. Her vocal is the only taste of honey that does not lose its sweetness or turn sour.

ROYAL EXCHANGE THEATRE 15TH MARCH – 13TH APRIL 2023