Image from the National Theatre web site |
Images from the National Theatre web site
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This production of Fugard's play features a compelling performance from Anson Boon as he expertly walks a dramatic tightrope, making the white teenager Hally both likeable and loathsome at the same time. He rolls his tongue around the South African accent, articulating every syllable uttered by his erudite, yet immature, character. His co-stars, Lucian Msamati and Hammed Animashaun, also give memorable performances, adeptly portraying how black servants had to tiptoe around their white masters. Whenever they get a free moment, they practise ballroom dancing, trying to create something beautiful in an ugly world. As Sammie, Msamati exudes a graceful dignity, while Animashaun expertly gives the audience flashes of the myriad frustrations of the unfulfilled Willie. The almost perpetual rearrangements of the chairs and the table in the cafe convey both the tedium of servitude and the way in which Sam and Willie are boxed in by the oppression of apartheid. This is a play that should leave you with a deep impression of how discrimination can erode humanity. 8/10