| THE
STAGE
Theatre Review
Cast
exhibits fine teamwork
Duchess
Alone It Stands
This Irish import, written and directed by John Breen,
will inevitably be compared with John Godber's Up and Under.
But although it has a similiar subject -though this one is
about rugby union not rugby league - there are important differences.
Breen goes for a more physical approach than Godber, a collage
of episodes and impressions suggested by the victory of Munster
province over the touring All Blacks in 1978.
The cast of six - five men and one woman - play both teams,
their coaches, supporters and, in Niamh McGrath's case, the
wife giving birth to twins while her husband is on the rugby
field. The actors switch roles with great speed. One minute
they are conveying the fanaticism of the New Zealanders, psyching
themselves up with a Maori haka, the next brilliantly suggesting
the more laid back approach of the home team which has some
internal problems of its own - largely composed as it is of
Limerick men who play for rival teams. The sharp observations
of those who make up the fans and families are in many ways
the most amusing and significant parts of the play.
The acting, by Malcolm Adams, Dessie
Gallagher,Garrett Lombard, Gerry McCann and Paul Meade, in
addition to McGrath, is beyond reproach in all respects. Adams
shines particularly as grizzled old man and fiercely committed
coach while Gallagher and Meade display forbidding
physical presence. Jack Kirwan contributes an effective cyclorama
setting which shows the Limerick skyline and James McFetridge's
lighting cues into the non-stop action skilfully.
Peter
Hepple
The
Sunday Telegraph
January 6, 2002
Theatre
John Goss
Alone
It Stands
In recent times, every year in the London theatre has had
a strong Irish component, and the current year opened last
week with two contrasting faces of Ireland - one wearing an
amiable smile, the other a death's head grin. At the Duchess
Theatre, John Breen's Alone It Stands reconstructs a piece
of sporting history: the rugby match at Limerick in 1978 in
which the amateurs of the Munster team astonished the world
and themselves by beating the All Blacks. Over at the Pit,
in the Barbican, Martin McDonagh's The Lieutenant of Inishmore,
which was first seen last year in Stratford, tells a tale
of Irish paramilitary politics at their goriest.
In Alone It Stands the cast of six (five men, one woman) have
their work cut out. Not only do they have to mime the members
of both teams and their exploits on the pitch, they also have
to play a wide variety of fans and lots of other bit parts.
The skill with which they pencil in their roles is equalled
only by the speed with which they switch from one role to
another; and there's a cumulative effect too. The impersonation
of a flouncing schoolgirl is all the more amusing when we
have seen the same actor not long before being equally convincing
as a snobbish spectator, a wheezing old codger and a ferocious
All Black manager who fines a member of his team during a
pep-talk for "audible sighing".
Venues make a difference, and I must admit that I enjoyed
the show somewhat more when I saw it in Edinburgh a couple
of years ago, in a more intimate setting, and in the round.
But it is still delightful. There is some rich humour, especially
in the contrast between the Irish players' pessimism and the
New Zealanders' will to win; the mood is affirmative without
being hearty; and over and above the individual vignettes
you get the sense of a whole community being brought to life.
Financial Times
Tuesday
January 8 2002
Theatre
Edinburgh try converted to a London goal
When
I first saw John Breen's Alone It Stands, at the Traverse
Theatre in Edinburgh in August, 2000, its most obvious reference
was John Godber's Up'n'Under. Now it has opened for a brief
season in the West End's Duchess Theatre, it is more appropriately
to be compared to a production running half a mile away: Marie
Jones' Stones in his Pockets. Breen's account of the amateur
Munster rugby team's historic victory over the All Blacks
in Limerick on Hallowe'en 1978 shares a couple of designers
with Stones, but also a style and spirit, at once lampooning
and sincerely celebrating a particular conception of Irishness.
Each features a tightly drilled company
turning on a sixpence between multiple roles. Here,
the game itself is spliced with the stories of various knots
of fans and a gang of kids determined to build Limerick's
biggest ever Hallowe'en bonfire.
The staging of the match is fairly Godberesque, with its stylised
freezes, slow motion and constant narration from the characters;
frankly, though, there aren't that many different ways you
can show rugby on a stage with a cast of half-a-dozen. There
is little chance for any of the actors to draw breath, and
no-one ever leaves the stage through the show (at two hours,
slightly longer than the match itself), instead sitting on
benches literally on the sidelines of the playing area.
Malcolm Adams has a nice line in portraying a series of hapless,
often slightly wimpish characters; Gerry McCann delights
as a fan on the terraces while his wife is giving birth to
twins - "No child of mine", he declares earlier,
"would have the bad manners to be born during a match".
But the palm goes to Dessie Gallagher, whose main roles are
pessimistic fan Lanky ("Scorin' against them....it'll
only annoy them") and Munster captain Donal Canniffe,
whose very moment of triumph was dashed by the news that his
father had suffered a fatal heart attack while listening to
the (untelevised) match on the radio.
The subject-matter may seem on the parochial, but the human
interest and David-and-Goliath aspects ensure a more than
agreeable time. Breen's writing and direction are ebullient
enough to have carried the piece through two and a half years
of life, much of it in performance in various rugby clubs
across Ireland.
-
Ian Shuttleworth
The
Sunday Tribune
Arts Extra
In a field of its own
ALONE IT STANDS
Andrew's Lane Theatre
OCTOBER 1978: The day that Munster beat the All-Blacks has
become one of those 'where were you when' moments, a signal
point when a rag-tag team of amateur rugby players improbably
shut out (arguably) the best team in the world. And because
the match wasn't televised (nice one, RTE) we've had to rely
on memory and storytelling to keep it alive; now there are
many people who believe they were actually at Thomond Park
that day, so vivid and personal have the memories become.
In short, and in the perceptive words of John Breen, the writer/director
of the wonderful new play about the match, Alone It Stands,
the Munster victory over the All-Blacks is "the last
great folk memory" and as such is perfect fodder for
dramatisation.
The play weaves together stories of different people involved
in or affected by the match, some real-life, others fictionalised:
players from both teams and their coaches, assorted supporters,
and a gang of Limerick kids who take advantage of the lull
during match-time to assemble a mega-bonfire (remember it
all happened on Hallowe'en). Alone It Stands, co-produced
by Yew Tree Theatre in Ballina and Island Theatre Company
in Limerick, originated as a touring production to traditional
theatre venues and rugby clubs (great idea!) and its look
is appropriately rough-and-ready; there's no set, just a white
square on a black floor and two benches where the six members
of the cast sit when they're not 'in play'.
The poor theater aesthetic extends into the way the play is
written and staged: the actors play multiple roles including
animals, bits of furniture, and in one inspired moment, the
rugby ball itself. The play starts with an appropriately fierce
re-enactment of the All-Blacks 'stomping ritual': the cast
pound the floor with their feet, tongues out, panting and
growling and - from all appearances- having a total ball.
The phrase 'ensemble acting' is tossed around way too often
these days to describe any group that appears on a stage together;
this cast scrum, tackle, cheer, pick each other up and throw
each other around, switching ably between different characters,
scenes and energy levels, creating a unified team energy that
is an essential part of the production's meaning and its effectiveness.
All get many moments to shine: Malcolm Adams embodies the
play's conscience as the thoughtful Munster center Tony Ward;
Conor Delaney plays both a uniquely bizarre Limerick cab driver
and a hyperactive spaniel; Gerry McCann shows off an amazing
facility with accents and voices in a variety of roles; Ciaran
McMahon is genuinely touching as player Donal Canniffe whose
father passed away during the match; Karl Quinn displays equal
facility playing a new-born, a 12 year old wheeler-dealer,
and a Limerick codger; and tiny Niamh McGrath gives birth
on stage and throws herself into the tackle with equal fearlessness.
Breen's writing is fast and funny, and he gets the serious
thoughts in with the minimum sentimentality. This is big-hearted
popular theater at its best, and a production that has serious
touring potential. Wonder how it'd go down in New Zealand.
-Karen Fricke
The
Times
January 9, 2002,
Wednesday Sport
Rugby drama stands alone in its portrayal
of sport
New West End play brings together two worlds to provide entertainment
for everyone
It
was the woman in the beautiful, full-length, fur coat who
set the scene for rugby union's theatrical foray. Gliding
into the Duchess Theatre in London's West End last week, with
all the majesty and sophistication of a Hollywood star, she
stopped, suddenly, as she passed through the theatre's main
doors. "What did you say?" she barked at two men,
hovering by the entrance. They lowered their gaze and pulled
at their Irish rugby shirts, tightly wrapped over their paunches.
Her voice was loud, threatening and raucous. The accent was
unmistakeably Irish. The men looked from one to the other,
each hoping the other was able to summon up a suitable reply.
A silence had descended upon the foyer. "Did you fecking
say that I knew nothing about rugby? Did you?" the woman
said, pointing at her accusers and gnashing her teeth. "We
thought it rather unlikely," came a hesitant reply. "There
ain't no one in Ireland knows more about rugby than me. I've
played since I could walk and I'v e seen this play eight fecking
times. Know more about rugby than you've forgotten and I'm
a fecking theatre director and I used to act for the Royal
Shakespeare Company, so feck off."
With that, she spun round and departed for her seat, her coat
swishing out and almost knee-capping her accusers, in one
final, dramatic gesture. Before this verbal attack, the two
men had been discussing how the opening night of John Breen's
rugby play, Alone It Stands, might attract a peculiar mix
of sportsmen and thespians - those with an understanding of
rugby and those with an understanding of theatre. They spoke
as if the two worlds had nothing in common, the meeting of
two diverse cultures, the thinkers and the drinkers, perhaps.
In reality, of course, as the woman in fur so elegantly illustrated,
one can be both. Sport has a heavily threatical component
to it that makes it so utterly absorbing, so mind-blowingly
frustrating and so thrillingly uplifting. It is the drama
and high stakes that define sport, distinguishing it from
play. Sport has its villains and heroes; frail individuals
with complex relationships; brave leaders and, above all,
geniuses such as Paul Gascoigne, Jennifer Capriati and the
king of the breed, George Best, who have flaws that feed off
their gift, growing as the genius increases until the sporting
star blows apart at the top of his or her career. Their psychological
proclivities are the stuff of drama. Unfortunately, Breen's
play does not tackle some of the deeply psychological or sociological
issues of sport. Instead of attempting to worm its way beneath
the skin of sport and expose the nature of greatness, weakness
or determination in man, it places sport in its cultural context
and takes a light-hearted look at the great triumph of Munster
over the All Blacks in 1978.
The play interweaves the lives of the palyers with the watching
spectators, a birth, a death and the activities of a group
of teenagers too absorbed in building a bonfire to pay attention
to the match. The play invites theatregoers to accept that
six actors wearing rugby shirts represent everything from
a pregnant woman's womb to a scrum, a car and television characters.
And it does it fantastically well. The
choreography is exceptional, with players seemlessly moving
from inanimate objects to characters and back again. The use
of the body as a dramatic tool is achieved in a way reminiscent
of modern dance, but the extreme nature of the roles being
played and the swift transition between characters lends a
comic element, achieved with a deftness of touch.
The play is entertaining, well executed and has some absrobing
moments. One of the highlights was Niamh McGrath, the only
actress in the production, turning into the ball and flying
above the Limerick skyline to a commentary that touched on
the poetic. Alone It Stands is well worth seeing. It is like
a feel-good movie with scrums - a pleasant diversion and a
thoroughly enjoyable way to spend an evening.
- Max Velody
Copyright
2002 Times Newspapers Limited
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Tuesday, April 4, 2000
More
than a game, this is pure joy
by Declan Hassett
ALONE
IT STANDS is as good as the whole country has been saying
for months and is enjoying its second tour at the Half Moon
Studio Theatre, Opera House, Cork, all this week and next.
Written and directed by John Breen, brilliantly lit by Gerry
Meagher and played by a cast of six with the fervour of the
Munster pack who shocked the mighty All-Blacks on that magical
afternoon in Thomond Park, Limerick, in 1978.
The record books reveal a 12-0 victory for the home side but
John Breen's play is not so much about the statistic but about
the flesh and blood, the very soul which fashion such a win
against seemingly insurmountable odds. Breen has captured
the intensity of that afternoon but above all he encapsulated,
all of 22 years later, just what the winning of one match
meant to so many. And this is not so much about a match but
more about life itself, any life, when only one result is
predicted and the odds are stacked.
Alone It Stands is a joy on several counts. The writer laces
the story with marvellous humour and humanity. He manages
to thread, through all the grunt and groan, a seam of real-life
tragedy with great delicacy and sensitivity. The cast are
a dream team and their artistic triumph on stage matches anything
achieved on the field of play. So catch if you can Malcolm
Adams, Conor Delaney, Gerry McCann, Niamh McGrath, Ciaran
McMahon, Karl Quinn.
The Studio Theater at the Opera House was distinctly chilly
last night, so it could have been the Thomond Park stand on
October 31, 1978. This is a play for anyone who has ever dreamed
and seen a dream come true.
THE
INDEPENDENT
Jan 4, 2002
Scrum like it hot
THEATRE
ALONE IT STANDS
DUCHESS THEATRE
LONDON
The
rules and culture of Rugby Union are about as familiar a subject
to this reviewer as the formation of irregular verbs in the
African clicking languages. As far as participation goes,
the one time I actually caught the
ball during a school game, I was so surprised that I ran with
it in the wrong direction. And everyone else was so surprised
that they let me. I shall never forget the look on my father's
face when he bought me my first boots and discovered me trying
to get en pointes in them. I have, moreover, a deep antipathy
to drama that overplays the plucky underdog card, and the
poster for this show (an outrageously appealing labrador supplicates
us with a rugby ball in its mouth) suggests that it will be
the ultimate incarnation of that mode. So it says a lot for
the huge charm of John Breen's comedy, Alone It Stands - about
the extraordinary day in 1978 when Munster defeated the All
Blacks in Limerick - that, rather like the Irish side, it
foxed and outmanoeuvred my prejudices and came in with a score
of 12-0 against me.
Directed by the author, the show is a bit like a cross between
the muscly comic mime of John Godber's Up 'n' Under and the
wily, protean Irish fun of the current hit Stones in his Pockets
- except that here , it's a cast of six that plays the multiple
roles, and the cultural invasion of the Emerald Isle is by
a team of gigantic New Zealanders rather than a Hollywood
film crew. Everyone - from the rival teams to the gobsmacked
supporters, from a trio of rickety oldsters watching the match
in a Cork pub to the Limerick women who think of rugby as
more of a mating ritual than a sport - are conjured into being
by five actors and an actress who, in the interest of fairness,
wear an All Black rugby strip in the first half, then change
into red and white for the eventual triumph.
"Do you know what they see when
they look at you?" the New Zealand manager barks at his
squad. "The most desirable virgin in all of rugby - pure,
unsullied by defeat. Do you know what happens to virgins who
piss about? They get fucked!" Part of the humour of the
piece comes from the fact that the same performers have to
shift in the twinkling, between two very different physical
types: strapping Goliaths and life-sized Davids. For
a conventional drama, it would have been better if the Munster
team had snatched last-minute victory from the jaws of defeat.
But Breen gets some excellent comic mileage from the way the
Irish team's unbroken lead challenges the innate pessimism
of their supporters, embodied here by Dessie Gallagher's hilariously
wary Lanky. "Scoring against them - it will only make
them angry," he tuts, constantly expecting a blood-boltered
backlash. Used to history lessons, where the English always
have the last laugh, Lanky can hardly cope with this o ut-of-the-blue
white-wash.
Breen also brings in birth (a supporter's wife is delivered
of twins while he is at the match, the miming of her labour
amusingly confused with the scrums on-field) and death (the
father of one of the Irish players dies while watching the
match). Too neat a pairing? Perhaps, but this doesn't detract
much from a delightful evening.
PAUL TAYLOR
The
Sunday Times
January 13, 2002
Munster woos West End
Denis Walsh
The province's famed victory over the All Blacks is brilliantly
tackled amid the bright lights of London
The actor Malcolm Adams is sitting in
his dressing room at the Duchess Theatre in London's West
End, reflecting on the life of Alone It Stands. From this
elevated place, it is a panorama stretching out below. The
night they staged the play at Dundalk rugby club is far off
in the distance but it is no strain on his mind's eye. These
were the nights that made them. The only costumes for the
show are All Black jerseys in the first half and Munster jerseys
in the second but that day the bag which should have contained
the Munster jerseys returned from the laundrette stuffed with
duvets. On another night they might have laughed and put it
down to "showbiz, darling" except that in the audience
was a critic from RTE Radio's Arts Show. At the intermission
they were presented with Dundalk rugby jerseys and told to
make do. "It was obviously jerseys they had played in
and hadn't washed," says Adams, "I swear to God,
the smell. We get so close to each other on stage with all
the srums and rucks and what have you that I was almost throwing
up. Awful, awful, awful."
The critic loved it. They all did. For almost two-and-a-half
years Alone It Stands has been propelled on a swell of critical
approval and popular acclaim. It has washed up in many places,
but none so exotic as this, none so unlikely. John Breen's
ingenuous portrayal of Munster's victory over the All Blacks
in 1978 was conceived and designed to be played in rugby clubs
but now it is in the second week of a six week (sic) West
End run. Across the road the musical Buddy Holly is in its
13th year; a hundred yards away stands the Theatre Royal on
Drury Lane, London's most stately theatre. Such a milieu.
All of the English broadsheet newspapers have sent along their
critics and, but for a couple of pointed exceptions, they
have been charmed. For Breen the gratification is enormous.
"In the West End you are in the heart of things,"
he says. "You have to justify your presence there. It's
like playing tennis at Wimbledon. 'Am I good enough to be
on centre court?' 'Is the play good enough to be in the West
End?' The critics have said, 'Yes it is'."
The play took off as a cult classic and soon became something
of a mainstream phenomenon. Its last run in Ireland extended
to nine months, including four weeks at the Gaeity Theatre
in Dublin and three weeks at the Olympia, packing out venues
which hold more than 1,000 people. It has been seen by nearly
120,000 people in Ireland alone. It took Breen six months
to write and once the cast of six were chosen they "shacked
up in a house in Limerick" and rehearsed for six weeks.
It was written without a set and without props save for two
benches at the side where the cast occasionally draw breath
and sip water, though never all together. The six actors never
leave the stage and between them they play almost 60 roles,
from Tom Kiernan and Tony Ward to a barking dog and a chorus
of chanting earthworms. Don't ask, you gotta see it.
They started off on byroads and sometimes went off-road. In
their second run they played the high-security wing of Portlaoise
Prison. An intimate gathering of 50 or so of the most dangerous
criminals in the country. Midway through the first half the
lights failed. "It was mad," says Adams. "Immediately
they were blaming the screws for turning them off. One of
the prisoners said 'Right no one gets out of here until the
lights come back on'. The next scene was the one with the
All Blacks' coach, who is a real authority figure, and they
all just shut up. It was a really interesting response. They
liked the play though, they got a kick out of it. Afterwards
people came back stage and we met the Border Fox (Dessie O'Hare).
I guess he'd been in jail for 15 years at this point and he
was big into yoga - so he was really mellow which was so incongruous
with the history this man has. As we were leaving there was
suddenly a spontaneous round of applause from the prisoners
out o n the landings. We literally walked a gauntlet of applause.
Such a strange experience. These hardened men going 'Yeah'."
They took the play to Glasgow and to the Edinburgh Fringe
Festival and then to another festival in Tasmania. The good
word had preceded them and the shows were sold out before
they arrived. When they finally moved from small venues to
big theatres they inevitably made the jump in Limerick. Acceptance
there doubled as an imprimatur. One night all of the local
rugby club presidents and their committees came together and
the laughter extended the show by 15 minutes. The Munster
team came too, a few days before they beat Toulouse in the
semi-final of the European Cup two years ago.
Three of the original cast are still with the show. Niamh
McGrath is the only one who hasn't missed any of the 430 or
so performances which is an extraordinary feat of endurance
in such a physically demanding production. A knee injury has
haunted one of the cast recently and though they stretch and
warm-up before they go on stage all of them have suffered
a little from the strain. Cabin fever, though, would have
done for them all by now if it wasn't for the esprit de corps.
Before the show arrived at the Duchess they had always changed
in the same dressing room. Now they have private rooms and
they say they miss the group dynamic. The price of success.
On their first night in Waterford rugby club they couldn't
have charted their journey. Reaching the West End, they couldn't
be more faithful to the story they tell.
[extract]
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