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Alterations: A riveting snapshot of 1970s Britain
Alterations: A riveting snapshot of 1970s Britain

Telegraph

time28-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Alterations: A riveting snapshot of 1970s Britain

After scoring a success in 2022 with an American drama, Blues for an Alabama Sky – about the twilight of the Harlem Renaissance – the ever-estimable director Lynette Linton is back at the Lyttelton with a home-grown rarity that provides a no less riveting slice of life from the turbulent Seventies. Set in a Carnaby Street tailor's run by an industrious West Indian striver called Walker, Alterations (1978) by the British-Guyanese writer Michael Abbensetts documents a period of social transformation and attempted assimilation while addressing – with timeless, tragicomic flair – the way that self-sacrifice can result in frayed hopes and dreams. Abbensetts was the first black British playwright to write a TV drama series (the BBC's 1978 show Empire Road), and had other distinctive credits. But since Little Napoleons (1994), the C4 mini-series about warring solicitors, his pioneering efforts have been overlooked. Using some nifty textual enhancements (by Trish Cooke), Linton's richly textured production reclaims him as a major voice – his place in the scheme of things not unlike that of his protagonist, who's faced with his toil seeming in vain but who struggles on regardless, looking to the future to vindicate him. In the astute manner of Arthur Miller, Abbensetts grasps the cost of capitalism, but even as we see Arinze Kené's tunnel-visioned Walker sweat to deliver an unfeasible pile of trouser-alterations for a Jewish client, at the expense of his and his work-force's well-being, it's shown as an enabler too. 'Making money is the best revenge I know,' he argues, viewing wage-slavery as a route to empowerment: earn enough and he can buy the premises; graft can be an act of self-expression. Not a fashionable stance, then or now, and it sets him at odds with his colleagues: the laidback Buster (forever phoning the hospital to check about his pregnant wife's condition), and a disaffected, militant youth called Courtenay. It puts him on collision course, too, with his wife Darlene, who feels he's short-changing his family and is open to overtures from the dandyish, drifting hanger-on Horace. It could come across as soapish, but, with its time-pressed action served without a break on a stage that eschews hefty naturalism for a rustled-up minimalism, it proves a fine drama of ideas and warring imperatives, the humour stitched with pathos. In a role created by Don Warrington, Kené confirms his top-drawer skillset: giving us an anti-hero unlovably married to his job but also child-like in wordless reveries that picture his demanding folks back home, his fantasy emporium, and an uncertain future in the shape of a skulking, street-wise youth. He's expertly supported by Gershwyn Eustache Jnr, Raphel Famotibe and Karl Collins in the back-biting – and in the latter's case, as Horace, back-stabbing – entourage roles, with Cherrelle Skeete affecting as the sidelined woman in his life. Meanwhile Colin Mace as the world-weary client Mr Nat, implies with minimal means how thankless vital immigrant slog and zeal can be. Topical food for thought there, surely.

National Theatre to stage major work by ‘forgotten' black British playwright
National Theatre to stage major work by ‘forgotten' black British playwright

The Guardian

time11-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

National Theatre to stage major work by ‘forgotten' black British playwright

The National Theatre's decision to stage a work by a 'pioneering' and 'forgotten' black British playwright should be the start of a revival of similar overlooked work from the 70s and 80s, according to the creative team behind the project. Director Lynette Linton and writer Trish Cooke will bring their revival of Alterations by Michael Abbensetts to the Lyttelton Theatre stage this month, and have said the decision to stage a play by the Guyanese-born author, who was the first black British writer to have a series commissioned by the BBC, is overdue. 'There was a huge amount of black British playwrights, writers and artists all through the 70s, 80s and 90s – so it's important that young people know that, because we're all standing on the shoulders of each other,' said Linton, who is the artistic director of the Bush Theatre. 'I'm really glad Rufus [Norris, the artistic director and chief executive of the National Theatre], as part of his final season, has decided to say: 'Fuck it, let's put it on in the Lyttelton,' which is one of the biggest stages in the country, and highlight how incredible this man and his generation of writers were.' The production is partly possible because of the Black Plays Archive, a substantial collection of material that records black work staged in Britain, which is held at the National Theatre. 'If it wasn't for the Black Plays Archive those writers would be forgotten and lost, so hopefully this is the start of some sort of revival for other works as well,' said Cooke. Abbensetts's path to becoming a major cultural figure in the 70s was unlikely and remarkable. Born and educated in Georgetown, in what was then British Guiana, he was inspired to try writing after seeing a production of John Osborne's Look Back in Anger. He then moved to London and began writing work that drew from his life in the capital, such as The Museum Attendant, which became a BBC screenplay in 1973 and was inspired by his time working as a security officer at the Tower of London and as an attendant at Sir John Soane's Museum. The Museum Attendant aired the same year as Sweet Talk, his first stage work, which starred Don Warrington and was directed by a young Stephen Frears at the Royal Court's Theatre Upstairs. In 1977 the pair again worked on Black Christmas, a domestic drama about a black family shot on location in Birmingham. It was a typical Abbensetts story, mixing 'roots, racial tensions, mixed-race relationships, cultural power games, tolerance and integration', and starred Norman Beaton and Carmen Munroe. 'It was a knife of a play,' wrote Nancy Banks-Smith in the Guardian. Then came Empire Road: a groundbreaking black British sitcom which had an almost entirely black creative team featuring Norman Beaton and Joseph Marcell, while Horace Ové directed some episodes and Dennis Bovell provided the theme tune. It lasted two series, but despite its critical success, didn't signal the start of a new rush of similar black British television. Alterations was first staged in 1978, and is about a Guyanese tailor trying to establish himself on Carnaby Street in London. Linton and Cooke's revival stars Arinzé Kene and Cherrelle Skeete. Cooke was brought onboard to rewrite and update elements of the play – partly so that narrative elements were cleared up, but also because there were concerns over some of the stereotypical ways in which Jewish and female characters were presented. She said: 'He'd written it from the male characters' perspectives in 1978, when they were 'mens' men'. We obviously needed to keep that, but we needed to lift the other characters up as well, so you understood it and believed it.' Alterations is the latest in a string of major black British plays at London's biggest theatres. Jeremy O Harris's Slave Play was on in the West End, while Linton directed Benedict Lombe's play Shifters at the Bush Theatre before it transferred to the West End, becoming only the third play by a black British woman to debut there. 'I hope it's not a cycle,' said Linton of the recent stagings of black British work. 'The work needs to be part of the canon. I don't know if we're there yet – I hope we get there. In 10 years' time I hope we're not saying: 'Have we got there yet?''

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