Wednesday, October 23, 2024

'The New Real' by David Edgar

23 October 2024

On Saturday we were at The Other Place in Stratford-upon-Avon to see the Royal Shakespeare Company/Headlong production of 'The New Real' - a new play by David Edgar, directed by Holly Race Roughan. This reminded me a lot of David Edgar's 'Playing With Fire' which we saw at the National Theatre in 2005 (starring Emma Fielding and David Troughton - reviewed here in October 2005). In that play a New Labour high-flyer is sent north from London to sort out an ailing local authority with disastrous results. 'The New Real' uses a similar device, but on a global scale. The demise of communism in Eastern Europe, following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, led to many newly independent nascent democracies seeking the expertise of America and the West to develop their electoral processes. David Edgar's dark satire shows how this may have inadvertently instigated the wave of populism in Eastern Europe that then swept West to the UK and USA. In 'The New Real' two American political strategists (played by Martina Laird and Lloyd Owen), who have worked together successfully on US election campaigns, end up advising rival candidates in the presidential election in a fictional former Soviet state, resorting to increasingly underhand tactics to avoid losing their personal battle with each other. Caught in the middle of this feud is their British pollster Caro Wheeler (the excellent Jodie McNee) - who provides the moral conscience. The play is a fascinating thought-piece, though sometimes hindered as a drama by a George Bernard Shaw-like tendency to have the characters engage in long, rigorous, debates of ideas that feel like essays rather than dialogue. Nonetheless it was enjoyable, thought-provoking and very well acted.

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