SEARCH:  
Twitter Facebook RSS Feed
No Sacred Cows  
Toby Young
Saturday 15th October 2005

Shoot the Crow / What We Did to Weinstein


One of the hardest things about being a drama critic, at least for me, is that so many plays stubbornly resist categorisation--and Shoot the Crow by the Northern Irish writer Owen McCafferty is a prime example. Is it a comedy or a tragedy? Is it a proper, grown-up piece that wants to be taken seriously or a commercial production designed to put bums on seats? Is it high art or low entertainment?

It starts off as a fairly conventional West End comedy. We're introduced to two pairs of Irish builders, one pair played by Conleth Hill and James Nesbitt, the other by Packy Lee and Jim Norton. The plot is set in motion when each pair decides to steal an unrecorded shipment of tiles from under the other pair's noses. None of the four are particularly bright, and only one could be described as young, so the stage is set for a series of farcical scenes, no doubt concluding with all of them ending up with nothing.

Yet no sooner has the play settled into this well-worn groove, than it veers off in another direction. Socrates, the character played by James Nesbitt, buttonholes one of his workmates and pours his heart out to him, telling him about his charming but irresponsible father--"I worked out that there's a difference between being a character and having character"--and his fear that the apple hasn't fallen very far from the tree. It's quite a long speech and Nesbitt manages to invest it with such emotional power that it totally alters the trajectory of the play. Suddenly, Shoot The Crow is no longer just a comedy; it's a meditation on what we make of our lives and the various yardsticks we use to determine whether we're successes or failures.

At times, the play's shifts from one mood to the next are a little too abrupt, but on the whole Shoot The Crow manages to contain its disparate elements very successfully. This is partly down to McCafferty's skill as a dramatist--and the director, Robert Delamere, deserves credit for the skilful way in which he's choreographed the action around a large, rotating disc with a different set on each side. (The fluid transitions between the scenes help smooth over the play's rough edges.) But, above all, it's attributable to the skills of the actors. The entire cast is outstanding, able to make the play's lightening shifts in tone seem quite plausible. The changes of mood appear to flow, organically, from the characters as each of them switches back and forth--sometimes in the space of a few seconds--between optimism and despair. Shoot the Crow isn't quite Chekhov, who famously described his plays as "comedies", but it's an absorbing, expertly realised piece of work.

What We Did to Weinstein, a new play by a writer called Ryan Craig, is much more straightforward. It opens in the present, with an Israeli interrogator trying to establish what happened when one of his fellow soldiers--Josh--apprehended a Palestinian who's suspected of being the mastermind behind a recent suicide bombing. It then flashes back eight years, with Josh visiting his dying father in a London hospital, and after that the action flits between the two time periods, as well as various moments in the intervening years.

From a purely structural point of view, What We Did to Weinstein is extremely well put together, unfolding it's non-linear narrative with impressive skill. But this formal sophistication cannot disguise the fact that it deals with its incredibly complex subject matter--not just the Arab-Israeli conflict, but the clash between Western values and Islamic Fundamentalism--in a rather simple-minded, over-schematic way. According to the programme notes, Craig has written for a variety of long -running television series, including Hollyoaks, Mile High and Dream Team, and What We Did to Weinstein has a slightly soapy feel to it, with crudely drawn characters and a clear moral at the end. At times, it's almost as if it's designed for earnest, civic-minded teachers to take Sixth Formers to.

Still, it has its moments. There's a genuinely frightening scene in which a second generation Pakistani immigrant--played by Pushpinder Chani--terrorises his Westernised sister, threatening to beat her if she leaves the house to keep an assignation with a white boy. "This is our destiny," he tells her, trying to explain his recent embrace of Islam. "This is Allah's fury. It's been coming and it's unstoppable." He then begins to repeat what, to my ear, sounded like an actual Jihadist chant. "Me against my brother! Me and my brother against our cousins! Me, my brother and my cousins against the world!" It's eerily up to date, as if Craig is writing specifically about one of the apparently nice young men who blew themselves up on the tube last July.

What We Did to Weinstein is playing at the Menier Chocolate Factory and if its breathless topicallity becomes a little too much you can always pop into the restaurant during the interval. The brownies are absolutely sublime.

[ FIXED LINK | EMAIL TO A FRIEND ] Bookmark and Share




Email this article to a friend:

Your email:


Your friend's email:


Add message:




Twitter @LeeTPrice @afneil One would hope so, but little evidence to support that hope  (28 minutes ago)

BEST OF THE WEB

Fixing Britain's character flaws by Anthony Seldon - telegraph.co.uk
The shame of Britain's public school elite by Matthew Norman - telegraph.co.uk
Archbishop Cranmer responds to ASA assault on free speech - archbishop-cranmer.blogspot.co.uk
In defence of Murdoch by John O'Sullivan - nationalreview.com
In politics, you're either up or down by John Kampfner - independent.co.uk
James Lovelock recants - Daily Mail
Let's give Polly Toynbee the Britain she wants by Tim Worstall - blogs.telegraph.co.uk
Why the Eurozone's problems will get worse by Nouriel Roubini - slate.com
Pasty-gate is a proxy for right-wing rage, not class resentment by Bagehot - economist.com
Stella McCartney's Olympic uniforms are Conservative - Daily Mail
Baroness Ashton must resign by the Daily Mail - Daily Mail
Why Labour should support free schools by Andrew Adonis - newstatesman.com
Eric Pickles foils mansion tax plan by deleting mansion database - Daily Mail
Free schools are breaking down barrier to decent education for all by Charles Moore - telegraph.co.uk
Sean Penn should "give back" his Malibu estate to the Mexicans - blogs.telegraph.co.uk
Arrest of Sun journalists poses threat to press freedom - totalpolitics.com
At the West London Free School, nine pupils apply for every place - thisislondon.co.uk
The anti-academies campaign is led by Trots, says Michael Gove - bbc.co.uk
Quentin Letts applies for job of D-G of the BBC - independent.co.uk
Lasagne-gate - Daily Mail
Profit need not be a dirty word in education by Fraser Nelson - telegraph.co.uk
Osbornism by Matthew D'Ancona - thisislondon.co.uk
Can Michael Gove save Britain's schools? by Simon Heffer - Daily Mail
Rod Liddle: Liberal Fundamentalist - independent.co.uk
Is UKIP about to become the third force in British politics? - blogs.telegraph.co.uk
The Magnificent Victory at Cardinal Vaughan by Charles Moore - telegraph.co.uk
Cameron is facing class war within his own party by Dominic Lawson - independent.co.uk
Michael Gove and the nest of vipers by Ian Birrell - Daily Mail
Academies policy has been rapidly vindicated by Fraser Nelson - spectator.co.uk
Sign this e-petition to restore teaching of Classics in schools - submissions.epetitions.direct.gov.uk
Mossbourne Academy's outstanding A-level results - Guardian
I blame therapy culture for the riots by Dennis Hayes - thefreesociety.org
Cameron needs some enforcers at Number 10 by John McTernan - telegraph.co.uk
Phone-hacking rage is Caliban raging at his own reflection by Dominic Lawson - independent.co.uk
Why I'm a Conservative by Toby Young - nosacredcows.co.uk
The Government must crack the teaching unions by His Grace - archbishop-cranmer.blogspot.com
Telegraph feature on the ARK-sponsored Evelyn Grace Academy - telegraph.co.uk
Socialist Workers Party about to go belly up? - hurryupharry.org
"Ideological" is Labour's empty insult by Dominic Lawson - independent.co.uk
There is an alternative to the cuts – deeper and faster cuts - conservativehome.blogs.com
Leader of UK Uncut is middle class Oxford graduate - Daily Mail
Stephen Glover on the real magnitude of the cuts: Just 3% in real terms in the lifetime of this Parliament - Daily Mail
Peter Sissons dissects the BBC's leftwing bias - Daily Mail
Gove's school reforms reach tipping point - spectator.co.uk
Student protester privately-educated Cambridge undergraduate with father worth £78m - Daily Mail
Ed Balls gave £600,000 of taxpayers' money to the football team he supports - Daily Mail
Dominic Sandbrook on the rise of the Political Class - Daily Mail
Brown in his bunker: Final Hours - Guardian
Interview with Toby Young in Attain magazine - attainmagazine.co.uk
New York Times on News of the World phone hacking scandal - nytimes.com
Topic of Cancer by Christopher Hitchens - Vanity Fair
The perils of being a freelance journalist by Richard Morgan - theawl.com
Larry David interview in the Guardian - Guardian
Profile of David Cameron by Matthew D'Ancona - telegraph.co.uk
The truth about Corin Redgrave and the Workers Revolutionary Party - standpointmag.co.uk
Louis Theroux: I was Nick Clegg's fag at public school - telegraph.co.uk
 

BLOGROLL

Andrew Neil
Andrew Sullivan
Arts and Letters Daily
BBC News
BBC Sport
Benedict Brogan
Clive Davis
Coffee House
Conservative Home
Conservative Voices
Damian Thompson
Daniel Hannon
Gentleman Ranters
Guido Fawkes
Iain Dale
James Delingpole
James Wolcott
John Rentoul
Katharine Birbalsingh
Labour List
Madame Arcati
Mark Steyn
Matt Drudge
Melanie Phillips
Michael Crick
Michael Wolff
Newser
Nick Cohen
Nick Robinson
Nikki Finke
Normblog
Rob Long
Slate
The Arts Desk
The Corner
The Daily Beast
The First Post
The Huffington Post
The Omnivore
The Onion
Tom Shone
TV Controller
 

COLUMNISTS

AA Gill
Aidan Hartley
AO Scott
Boris Johnson
Chris Ayres
Cosmo Landesman
Daniel Finkelstein
David Brooks
George Monbiot
Giles Coren
Henry Winter
James Delingpole
Jan Moir
Jay Rayner
Jeremy Clarkson
Jim White
Jonathan Freedland
Lloyd Evans
Manohla Dargis
Martin Samuel
Matthew d'Ancona
Matthew Norman
Maureen Dowd
Michael Billington
Michiko Kakutani
Paul Krugman
Peter Bradshaw
Polly Toynbee
Quentin Letts
Rachel Johnson
Rod Liddle
Roy Greenslade
 
UK Book Cover

  • Buy the book on Amazon.co.uk

  • Buy the book on Amazon.com


  • UK Book Cover

  • Buy the book on Amazon.co.uk

  • Buy the book on Amazon.com


  • Audio Book Cover

  • Buy the audio book from
    Whole Story Audio
  • DVD Cover

  • Buy the DVD from Amazon.co.uk

  • Buy the DVD from Amazon.com


  • IMdb Page on the film