Four Play, Theatre 503 review ★★★★

Fresh voice Jake Brunger discusses the challenges of lukewarm monogamy as part of Theatre 503's season on sexual identity

Four Play - Photo credit Richard Lakos
Writer of The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 ¾, Jake Brunger is an up-and-coming London playwright whose new piece was originally commissioned by the Old Vic New Voices festival. Premiering at Theatre 503, Four Play is certainly the work of a new voice. With astute comedy and some delectable awkwardness, it examines monogamy in modern day relationships and the ways in which we choose to commit to each other.

In a world of thumping dance music and techno lighting, Rafe (Cai Brigden) and Pete (Michael Gilbert) begin to wonder whether their faithful seven-and-a-half-year relationship can provide all the world has to offer. Trusting that a tryst might scratch the seven-year itch, they recruit Michael (Peter Hannah) to satiate their desires, under the condition that Andrew (Michael James), his partner and their friend, must never know. The rules are set and the chase is on; the four characters become players in an ever-escalating game of love, lust, and longing.

With sharp scene shifts and quick set changes, the action jumps from rendezvous to rendezvous until, after much foreplay, it reaches its climax, a delicious dinner party where the audience is in on the secret. Hilarity and severe discomfort ensue while all four men realise the false simplicity of the phrase ‘it’s just sex’, and each in their own turn must reconcile their relationship status. Moments of deep sincerity transport the play from a straightforward situational comedy to a nuanced exploration of how relationships (both platonic and not) are kindled, sustained, and extinguished.

Four Play’s strong climax is also its weakness: the scenes directly afterwards lose the pent-up energy and anticipation that fuels the first half of the play. And it could go even further discussing expectations of love (particularly the shame felt when love wanes), and the crippling belief that we must have it all. Nevertheless, with strong performances and a charming script, Four Play is a heartfelt and humorous play well worth a trip to Theatre503.

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What Four Play, Theatre 503 review
Where Theatre 503, The Latchmere, 503 Battersea Park Road, London, SW11 3BW | MAP
Nearest tube Clapham Common (underground)
When 16 Feb 16 – 12 Mar 16, Showing from Tuesday to Sunday, at 7.45pm
Price £12 - 15
Website Click here to book your tickets via the Theatre 503's official website




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