A Robert Fox, Scott Rudin, Roger Berlind, Carole Shorenstein Hays, ABC Inc. and the
Shubert Organization presentation of a play in two acts written and directed by Patrick
Marber.
Alice - Anna Friel Dan - Rupert Graves Larry - Ciaran Hinds Anna - Natasha
Richardson
The increasing and to some degree dismaying infantilization of Broadway
finds a potent antidote in Patrick Marbers "Closer," a brilliant and
bracingly adult new play from London (where else?) that lights a scorching fire under this
lukewarm theater season.
Directed with propulsive rhythm by the author himself, and acted by an incomparable
quartet of performers, "Closer" is both bruising and beautiful, shatteringly
funny and devastatingly sad. It feels ripped from the heart, an organ memorably described
here as looking like "a fist wrapped in blood," and it leaves a lasting scar
there. Marber has joked that he didnt realize until hed finished the play that
he had written "Private Lives," and indeed in its prickly wit and essential
structure two contemporary couples who switch partners more than once
"Closer" recalls that Noel Coward classic. But its Coward laced with a
nihilistic chill that derives from Samuel Beckett.
Loves inevitable fading is the tragic subject of the play, but its also a
symbol of the greater inevitability of death. Pleading for love, a character makes the
connection with the brutal bluntness that marks all the emotional exchanges in the play:
"I need you. I cant think I cant breathe. We are going to
die."
Death and sex, those two great equalizers, are everywhere in "Closer." Dan
(Rupert Graves) is an obituary writer and aspiring novelist who meets the younger Alice
(Anna Friel) when she steps in front of a taxicab willingly, it is implied,
although her wry mischievousness at the hospital, where he has escorted her, is plenty
lively. The play then skips forward more than a year (its timeframe is millennial: life is
the blink of an eye). Alice and Dan are a couple, and Anna (Natasha Richardson), a
divorced and world-weary photographer, is snapping Dan for a book jacket. The sexual
attraction between them is instant, but Anna resists. "Im not a thief,"
she tells Alice, who arrives to pick up Dan and senses the dangerous electricity in the
room. The fourth character in the play is a dermatologist named Larry (Ciaran Hinds). It
was Larry who treated Alices injured leg at the hospital, but he enters the
plays sexual equation only by cyberchance, when Dan, posing as a woman named Anna in
an Internet chat room (in one of the plays crudest and funniest scenes), suggests a
meeting at which the real Anna happens to turn up.
Soon Anna and Larry are united, but in the searing final minutes of act one, the lives of
all four characters are turned inside out in a masterfully directed scene that brings the
subterranean ache of the play into wounding bloom. Dan coolly tells Alice that he and Anna
are in love, and the same information is prised out of a deeply hurting Anna by Larry.
From here unfolds an elegantly choreographed tale of love, jealousy, pain and revenge that
leaves all the characters wounded and one dead. Advance press has hyped the plays
sometimes startling sexual frankness, but theres nothing coarse or showy about
Marbers use of explicit dialogue (only Alices sometime profession as an
upscale stripper feels gimmicky). When Larry humiliates Anna by demanding to know the
sexual details of her alliance with Dan, its the brutality of the feeling, not the
words themselves, that sears.
Indeed the plays dialogue has a raw emotionality rarely heard in art or life. It
cuts like broken glass, rending flesh with every syllable, and is full of bitter,
intelligent, unvarnished truth. When Alice asks why Dan is leaving her for Anna, he
replies, "Because she doesnt need me," and, later, "Because Im
selfish and I think Ill be happier with her." Have the tortured dynamics
of love and need ever been laid bare as honestly onstage as they are here?
Marbers cast is more than up to the task of bringing the needed nuances to this
extraordinarily artful plays complexities (there is not an extraneous line in it,
and few are without coolly resonant meaning). Richardsons casual radiance and her
slow-burning way with the plays wryest passages particularly a monologue
about mens and womens emotional baggage round out the essential
goodness of her character. Graves shaggy good looks and puppy-dog eyes are
perfect for Dan, who is as deeply needy as he is careless of others needs. Hinds,
the only member of the cast from the original London production, has a Scottish accent
that defines his character as an outsider, and a heavy, brooding presence that makes his
emotional vulnerability all the more painful. But its the delicate, exquisitely
lovely Friel who is the discovery here. Her Alice is both the nihilistic core of the play
and its tender center, and the paradoxical mixture of toughness and fragility that Friel
brings to it are essential to the plays deepest truths. Its a star-making
performance.
The design team, too, provides stylistic details that amplify the plays ideas. Vicky
Mortimers set, which recalls the work of artist Christian Boltanski, is perfectly
detailed, right down to the choice of houseplants for decorative effect: cactuses
only! Hugh Vanstones lighting has chilly dramatic flair and Paddy Cunneens
music adds haunting atmosphere. Despite the stylishly seductive package and charismatic
performances, "Closer" is often hard to watch; its truths are painful, its
honesty makes you wince. In fact a telling irony of the play concerns the bitter fact that
honesty is as brutal as deception when it comes to matters of the heart. There is no easy
way out. "I dont want to lie and I cant tell the truth, so
its over," as one departing lover says with utter despair to
another.
Its Dans desperate need to know the truth of Annas and Alices
feelings both sexual and emotional that drives the play to its dark
conclusion. But the quest is futile. The plays sad message is that the truth of the
heart is ever-changing, and tainted by other equally liquid emotions: jealousy, pride,
selfishness, lust. Loves a paltry, unreliable, painful thing, Marbers bleakly
beautiful play tells us how grim and how funny, then, that it is all we have to
ward off the terrors of life and death.
Opened March 25, 1999. Reviewed March 23. Running time: 2 HOURS, 10 MIN.