15 January 2025
Stanley Kubrick's classic bleak cold war satire 'Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb' came out in 1963, eighteen months after the Cuban Missile Crisis. It painted a chillingly believable scenario in which the carefully poised balance of the nuclear deterrent could be tipped into mutually assured destruction by the actions of one unhinged individual. On Saturday we were at the Noel Coward Theatre in London's West End to see the new stage adaptation of 'Dr Strangelove' by Armando Iannucci and Sean Foley. The film is famous for Peter Sellers' portrayal of multiple characters and the stage version features Steve Coogan playing four parts (the three played by Sellers but also Major Kong - memorably played by Slim Pickens in the film). It was fun to see the film recreated on stage and there were some great comic performances from the (almost entirely male) cast, but as a two hour play it really needed a bit more plot. Steve Coogan is very funny in all four roles and it was great to see him on stage but apart from the enjoyable game of watching how he is going to manage to switch from one character to another in the same scene the show felt a bit slight. I did however enjoy the recreation of the famous scenes from the film through Hildegard Bechtler's magnificent set, particularly the US President's War Room with its 'big board'.
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