A Comedic Threesome... Oops!
The sheer daring of the construction of these three plays is, all these years on, still as amazing as it must have been back then. Table Manners, Living Together and Round and Round the Garden (each a little over two hours) depict the same weekend, but each from a different vantage point — the dining room, the sitting room and the garden. Ayckbourn constructs them like a jigsaw, so that an exit in one play becomes the entrance in another.
The unfortunate characters are all assembled, whodunit- style, at a weekend gathering in a vicarage in Sussex. This new production is pitch perfect. The acting is flawless, the orchestration of the action seamless, and the shows are staged in the round with a bank of extra seating installed at the rear of the stage.
The chaos is caused by Norman, who attempts to seduce his lonely sister-in-law Annie, his brother-in-law’s uptight wife Sarah, and even his own semi- detached spouse, Ruth. Coming and going throughout each play is the nice but terribly dim vet Tom (John Hollingworth), whose vocabulary is mostly ‘um’.
In despair of Tom ever proposing to her, Annie (Jemima Rooper) agrees to a dirty weekend in East Grinstead with Norman. The idea is quickly quashed by her ghastly, brittle sister-in-law Sarah, who lives in marital hell with the nerdy Reg – Sarah Hadland and Jonathan Broadbent both performing flawlessly.
At the centre of it all, rising star Trystan Gravelle gives a fabulous performance as hairy Norman, a ‘gigolo trapped inside a haystack’ as he calls himself, whose success with women is inexplicable, even to himself. Ayckbourn exposes in these plays a deeply pessimistic view of the pursuit of human happiness; and director Blanche McIntyre milks every last drop of sadness while conjuring up exhausting waves of laughter.
Which is the best of the trilogy? Impossible to say. But the plays’ daring, depth and sheer comic dazzle is greatly enriched by seeing all three as a box set. Until 28 October at the Chichester Festival Theatre: 01243-781312, www.cft.org.uk