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The Pendulum

28 June 2008 Written by Jens PetersPrint This Post Print This Post Email This Post Email This Post
The Pendulum

Alexander Fiske-Harrison’s new play at the Jermyn Street Theatre is well-made in every sense of the term. He presents a solidly written story of love and jealousy, twisted with social and racial bigotry and set in turn-of-the-century Austria. The plot is foreseeable enough, although I’m still not sure why the play is called The Pendulum, given that it’s dominated by a unidirectional drive towards an unavoidable ending.

The performance starts off rather mysteriously, with three masks dancing in a dangerous ménage-a-trois to music that is both eerie and evocative of the period. It reminded me of Arthur Schnitzler’s Dream Novella, and consequently of Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut in its more thrilling moments. Unfortunately, this tension and ambiguity was soon deflated and never reappeared on the scene.

The casts’ performance is focused on the exploration of these clashing passions. Alexander Fiske-Harrison’s von Leiben, a military man through and through and at ease with his own body and physical beauty, is effectively contrasted with Gareth Kennerley’s awkward intellectual Neurath. Unfortunately, the script does not allow them to explore their characters in greater depth, and thus the two leading men remain archetypal sketches. Sian Clifford somehow manages to penetrate deeper into the substance of being in her portrayal of Elena Suttner. Her energy does justice to her character’s independence, but she also manages to capture Elena’s underlying vulnerability. The Pendulum Production Photo 2Clifford has a remarkably open face that lets the audience peer at the emotional doubts of a woman of Elena’s ilk would have had in the conservative Vienna of the 1900s. Even James Clarkson, who appears in the exceedingly minor role of von Leiben’s servant Otto Melk, manages in the few instances where he is not relegated to the labour of a stage hand to convey a warmth of feeling for his master that is truly powerful.

Overall, The Pendulum’s setting is interesting and problematic enough, but Fiske-Harrison does not succeed in translating this at an interpersonal, psychological, or emotional level. The issues remain on the level of historical discourse. In its better moments, the play reminded me of Visconti’s Senso. But where the Italian film is able to jolt its audience repeatedly by keeping its characters, their motivation, and their moral quality ambiguous, The Pendulum remains too simplistic and clear-cut in its depiction of Viennese society.

For further information about The Pendulum visit the production website here.

Top and Bottom Photos by Matt Jamie.

4 Comments »

  • TheatreGoer69 said:

    First of all, I’d like to congratulate London Theatre Blog on the new design and then in response to Jens’ review, I’d be interested to know why he describes the masked dance scene as ‘dangerous’. What did it consist of?

  • Jens Peters (author) said:

    I called the ménage-a-troi ‘dangerous’, but more on a psychological level. As I said, I was reminded of Eyes Wide Shut, and the masked dance with the exchange of partners in The Pendulum hinted at the dangers and complications that can arise in a complex social setting. That is von Leiben’s main problem: he thinks he can live in his own world, alone with Elena, but has to find out that their actions and their past also influence his relation to his friends, the way he is seen publically, and so on.
    Hence, the ‘danger’ of the masked dance lies in its secret potentiality, in raising the audience’s awareness of what could happen, and of the things happening underneath the veneer of the human face (which is itself a mask to society).
    Hope I made myself clear!

  • TheatreGoer69 said:

    Hi Jens, thanks for the clarification. I see what you mean now.

    Eyes Wide Shut is one of my favourite Kurbick films (even though he wasn’t able to see it through). The orgy scene resonates on multiple levels and has become an iconic cinema moment.

    Significant cuts were made to the scene for the maintstream box office release, so from the outset it underwent a degree of ‘masking’.

    Secrecy and revelation are two opposing forces at work in the film, but also in the ’social masks’ we build and wear on a daily basis. The one cannot work without the other, but when used simultaneously (masked faces and naked bodies) become a source of tension.

  • Alexander Fiske-Harrison said:

    I thought if you liked the play at all, you might like my essay on bullfighting in the September issue of Prospect magazine - http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10357.

    AF-H

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