"I found I was desperate for a tiger prawn salad"
Though probably best known for her Royal Court hit Posh
which transferred successfully into the West End this year, Laura Wade has been
writing plays since 1996. But it is her 2006 play Other Hands which receives
its first professional UK revival here at the Riverside Studios, fresh from a
tour of the South Coast. Wade revisited the play to make a few updates to the
text to reflect the technological advances and economic turmoil in the six
years since it was written but at its heart, the central issues of Other Hands
remain just as pertinent today. In a world of ever-increasing reliance on
technology and the relentless pursuit of efficiency, are we in danger of not
investing enough time in human relationships. To quote the playwright herself,
what’s the use in 10,000 Facebook friends if you have no-one to give you a hug
at the end of a rubbish day.
Wade explores this contemporary malaise in two ways through the central couple
of Steve and Hayley. Together for 8 years and both professionally adept at
fixing things, Steve is a freelance IT consultant who is perfectly happy to
while away the hours on his PlayStation instead of looking for business as
Hayley is a high-flying management consultant, earning enough to keep them both
afloat. But they are barely treading water emotionally, and as problems start
to manifest themselves physically too in the form of Steve’s ever-worsening RSI,
they both start to look elsewhere.
What they both find is the possibility of greater connection. Pamela Banks’ brisk
Hayley, sequestered in a world of corporate-speak, finds a way out through a
serious flirtation with Greg, a married client, leading to a fantastically
charged scene of great power. And James Dutton’s appealingly dopey Steve connects
with the dippy Lydia, who is as desperate for human interaction as he, as
fixing her computer leads to a deeper emotional intimacy, but one which
manifests itself as genuine compassion as she turns her helping hand to Hayley too,
as her hands also becomes afflicted.
What Wade captures perfectly is the manner in which society moulds the way that
we communicate. Despite their other benefits, technological advances and business-oriented
mindsets have actually limited our emotional literacy and supplanted some of the
necessary braveness to make tough decisions about one’s own life. The cast get
the rhythm of this inarticulacy beautifully under James Bounds’ precise
direction and Ellan Parry’s design allows for quick transitions which are
interestingly lit by Miguel Vicente. It’s a fascinating take on love and life
which is full of sharply comic observations – the passive-aggressiveness of a
stale couple is brilliantly depicted – but also an insightful critique on the
way modern society is heading.
Running time: 2 hours 10 minutes (with interval)
Booking until 27th October
Labels: Chris Gilling, James Dutton, Laura Wade, Lucy Lill, Pamela Banks