by Natalie Bennett
Were Falstaff to wander into the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn over the next couple of weeks, he’d feel right at home. For in the RSC’s production of a new play, Days of Significance, there’s drinking, and cussing, jokes about bodily fluids, vile curses and martial strutting. Although there’s none of the fine tricksy words of the aristocrats with whom Shakespeare forces him to deal – no fancy lords trying to trap the into battle.
Instead there are the young lads of 21st-century Britain, with few prospects and little to hope for but a rough form of male bonding, and a drunken heterosexual shag on a Saturday night. Their female compatriots are, generally, not reluctant to oblige.
Just as in Falstaff’s taverns of early modern London, the manners are rough. Wooing on the distaff side is as likely to be conducted by a slap around the chops and a twist of the balls as by pretty words, on the spear side by a vomit-splattered, staggering speech “yeah” “err” “whatever”.
But the fundamental subject is Iraq – the “heroes” the achingly young, ill-educated, lost before they land lads who wind up today in the British army ranks, the “heroines” their lasses – as foul-mouthed and drunken, if far more verbally and emotionally literate. (The Daily Mail’s Quentin Letts called it “treasonous”, which has to be a pretty high recommendation.)
The play is billed as written in response to Much Ado About Nothing, although the relationship is distant – the feel much more of a History play – one of those in which Shakespeare skated close to political sensitivities. Which isn’t to say this isn’t a very, very funny play – prepare for belly laughs, often close followed by gasps of horror.
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