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Jigsaw review: A play so up close we hear the voice in its character's head

Jigsaw review: A play so up close we hear the voice in its character's head

Irish Times09-05-2025

Jigsaw
Glass Mask Theatre at Bestseller, Dublin
★★★☆☆
Audiences have always been on intimate terms with theatre. In a medium that thrives on its proximity and liveness, even plays staged in small rooms above pubs, and conceived with limited resources, can forge close connections. Just pull up a seat.
Lee Coffey's breakout play,
Leper + Chip
, electrified the close-quartered Theatre Upstairs in 2014. In recent years the playwright's projects have been staged in larger venues and become more kaleidoscopic and sweeping in scale.
With Jigsaw, his new play for Glass Mask Theatre, Coffey is going back to the small room in the bar.
When Jim, a Dubliner homeless and sober for many years, busily pragmatic and unrestrainedly honest in Alan Devine's performance, is seen leaving his hostel, he gives an instruction that sounds intriguingly commanding; it could be punctuated with a colon. 'I walk. Dublin: talk,' he says, outlining the conceit of many a Dublin odyssey as the play roves past familiar urban scenes. ('On the left is the Spire, a f**king waste of money.')
READ MORE
He encounters several people from his life before living on the streets, including a schoolmate turned gym overlord and an estranged daughter (all depicted by Craig Connolly), who help recount an incident in which Jim, out of control on cocaine, was accused of assaulting his wife.
Connolly isn't here just to portray the play's external characters. During a tense reunion with his spouse, Jim begins hearing things – 'this voice peeping up'. Connolly starts addressing him like a kind of shoulder devil, as if Coffey were giving addiction an internal voice, stirred by triggers and rationalising relapse: 'I head to town!' ('That's the spirit!')
It's not the first time Jim has heard voices. When the play's second half goes back 20 years, swapping in Connolly as a younger version of the man, with Devine now providing the back-up as surrounding characters, we see him take cocaine for the first time, at his wife's New Year's Eve party. 'This is the sound of getting f**ked up,' he says, grimly literal. ('We're going to be friends, you and I,' Devine says with a grin.)
As the play moves towards an uneasily reconcilable conclusion, asking questions of a society quick to judge, it's possible that this could be delivered with the breakneck pace of Leper + Chip. Ian Toner's production often feels stranded somewhere less certain. (It was the late Karl Shiels, an actor intimate with the plays of Mark O'Rowe, who first recognised that playwright's snappy crosscuts and exhilarating speed in Coffey's work, and chose to direct Leper + Chip.)
O'Rowe's early work has its own DNA, its punching henchmen and horny seducers indebted to the contrived machismo of David Mamet's theatre. Coffey is insistently less cartoonish, as if trying to land a whirling Dublin tale, fuelled by thrills and suspense, somewhere as recognisably real as the modern despair of addiction and homelessness. With all the puzzle pieces, that could be a finished picture worth seeing.
Jigsaw is at
Glass Mask Theatre at Bestseller
, Dublin, until Saturday, May 24th

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12 must-see artworks at the RHA Annual Exhibition 2025
12 must-see artworks at the RHA Annual Exhibition 2025

Irish Times

time25 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

12 must-see artworks at the RHA Annual Exhibition 2025

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The idea of sunbathing at the end of the world calls to mind Sun & Sea, the opera performance that came to Cork Midsummer in 2023, after winning the Golden Lion for Lithuania at the Venice Biennale in 2019. Bernadette Kiely: No Promised Land 195th RHA Annual Exhibition: No Promised Land, by Bernadette Kiely. Courtesy of the artist A highly accomplished painter, Bernadette Kiely has been increasingly focusing her subtle eye on the climate crisis . Her arresting oil painting No Promised Land seems as if it is literally saturated, as a bright-red delivery truck is swamped in the midst of a flooded plain. Conjuring all the nuances of greens and greys, and with a brilliant eye for composition, Kiely shows how easily our landscapes, and our sense of safety, can be obliterated by the power of natural forces. We can just make out roads, hedges and the tops of trees, but if we don't do something soon, the future could become a highly inhospitable place – even in Ireland's gentle fields. 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