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Irish Independent
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Irish Independent
Barmy, chaotic comedy tackles the world of corporate philanthropy
'The Lunch Punch Power Hour in Conference Room 4' on the Peacock Stage, Abbey Theatre is clever and bamboozling but perhaps too unruly to fully take a deep dive into the serious themes it explores The Irish business world is having a moment on the Dublin stage, with this absurdist frolic into corporate shenanigans following on from Sugarglass's production of Molière at Smock Alley. Caitríona Daly's new play has a lot going for it, but it only really gets into its stride towards the end. The play follows two senior colleagues and a roped-in recent hire having a meeting to determine what a social responsibility budget surplus should be spent on. Executive assistant Clodagh (Caoimhe O'Malley) wants it spent on saving the bees. Working-from-home executive Daniel (Fionn Foley) wants it spent on his daughter's Offaly GAA club. Jess, the recently hired receptionist (Emma Dargan-Reid), is mainly trying to find her feet and not get fired. And Susan (Helen Norton), the HR head, is hovering outside the room, trying to gain access through the locked door.


Irish Times
21-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Irish Times
A Misanthrope: knockout satire of a horny and insincere Silicon Docks
A Misanthrope Smock Alley Theatre, Dublin ★★★★☆ There is no questioning where we are. In the bowels of a sheeny tech district, a star employee puts on a show for her office situationship, shimmying out of her underwear in front of him. Their lusty rampage through the workplace, throwing each other from desk to desk, ends with one lover reaching for something that epitomises hipster Dublin in 2025: a post-coital matcha tea. In Sugarglass and Smock Alley Theatre 's flooring adaptation, Molière's 17th-century comedy of outspoken aristocrats stirring trouble for posers in Paris salons has been fully vapourised, rematerialising in a Dublin of agonised Millennial love. 'Our merger is starting to feel laissez-faire / And that's more than this man can bear,' says Alceste, a company cynic played by Matthew Malone , asking his office hook-up for more commitment – and to stop flirting with other staff to get ahead. 'It's just marketing,' says Célimène, a company superstar about to launch a new AI platform, played by Emer Dineen . 'So, suck it up / And I'll not suck your rivals.' READ MORE Among the refurbishments in a playscript by industrious American playwright Matthew Minnicino – painstakingly refashioned to fit the Silicon Docks – is the original comedy's 17th-century vogue of rhyming couplets, chiselled here into new lines that are head-spinningly impressive. When Malone's Alceste vents about a HR complaint by an impressively brawny enemy (Matthew Tiente as an office snake dressed up as a bruh), he leans into rhymes that are funnily cruel. 'His rotundity is up to him / Though it's not that hard to switch to skim.' Sick burn! Dineen's Célimène is a star on the rise but she isn't as untouchable as she thinks. Two tech bros are given their required slime by Naoise Dunbar and Adrian Muykanovich (One of them drools over his own bicep: 'How can one so majestic be abashed? / When I went on Tinder / It crashed.'). Upon realising she's played both of them, they decide to sabotage the launch of her new AI platform. Bringing up the rear is a hateful office prude, who, in Fiona Bell's expert performance, becomes near-orgasmically breathless during a report to Alceste that his friend with benefits is cheating on him – prompting Malone, a performer as wiry as a young Richard E Grant, to lean into the ferocious end of his range. Minnicino's inventive playscript allows director Marc Atkinson Borrull, after a streak of respectably intimate productions, to return to the wildness of his 2012 debut All Hell that Lay Beneath. (Astonishingly, Minnicino has rhymes to burn. 'Where did we last meet?' a performer whispers to me in the stalls, 'Was it in the Maldives / Where you said I looked like Keanu Reeves?'). Notably, when ambushed during her launch, a leaked voice note allows Célimène to stray from the 'rotten rhymes' of Molière's scheme, and unmask a world-saving tech company as a toxic culture of exploitation and pay-offs, without having to satisfy people – or metre. Telling the truth gets you in trouble in A Misanthrope. You can try to take others down with you. A Misanthrope is at until August 2nd