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The COMPANY of PLAYERS
Reviews: Dealer's Choice
Had I been reviewing the play for the London fringe, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it at all. I nearly didn't here, but as this is a review for COPS I think it's important to consider the impact you're having on your audience as a local amateur dramatics group. If you're trying to make the transition from mainstream to fringe remember that the audience has got to make the transition as well, which may mean losing some of your traditional clientele. The night I was there I think one or two were nearly lost from heart attacks! A warning on the programme at least may have been appropriate. Enough of that, however, let's get to the important stuff! Dealer's Choice is a very male play, in more ways than one, and it was interesting to see that it was directed by a woman. Full marks for bravery go to Claudia McKelvey both in her choice of play and her direction of the all-male cast in a very testosterone-fuelled story. It's a play about the addiction to gambling, which apparently the author had been through, the way it affects families and relationships, and attitudes to winning and losing in life.
The relationship between the father and son (Stephen, played by David Harrold and Carl, played by Andy Howell) was crucial to the dynamics of the play and was very well established by the actors. A lot of the dialogue is very taught and brisk and not easy to deliver in the punchy way that the script demands. It is made more technically difficult at times by the inter-cutting of what's happening between these two in the restaurant with what's going on in the kitchen. When two arguments are taking place at the same time it would be easy for the tension to snap and become clumsy, but overall I felt this was well handled and quite finely tuned. Credit for this should go to the director, as well as the actors. In the kitchen, apart from Mugsy, we also have the chef (Sweeney, played by Andy Lee) and another waiter (Frankie, played by Patrick Sunners). These two spend most of their time winding up Mugsy and making jokes at his expense, but we also learn of the mundanity of all their lives revolving as they do largely around the restaurant and the excitement of the weekly poker game on Sunday nights. It all goes to create a quite seedy atmosphere as we learn how they are variously indebted to Stephen, who owns the restaurant and dominates the poker. None of them is more indebted to him than his son, however, who seems to have the major gambling problem.
The second half of the play is devoted to the poker game and how the game itself reflects the fortunes of the respective gamblers, which I will not go into at any great length. This act introduces several major peaks of conflict which make the play's most telling points. The relationship between father and son, the tragic-comedy of Mugsy's dreams, and the nature of gambling addiction most tellingly illustrated when Stephen is tempted to settle his son's debts by the toss of a coin. The first two, again were well handled in both acting and direction, but the third, another moment of taught dialogue where Ash is taunting Stephen to call 'heads or tails' did snap and fall a little into clumsiness. This was only momentary, however, and did not detract from the overall professionalism of the performance. Again the setting for the poker game, the basement of the restaurant, was neat and made good use of the space, adding a tangibly claustrophobic feel to the atmosphere. In conclusion I felt that the production was a great success for the whole team and a good example of what can be achieved by a local company who are bold enough to attempt what would normally be considered as 'fringe theatre'. I hope that the postproduction reactions of the audience and fellow COPS members are as favourable and encourage the group to go on to do more adventurous productions in the future.
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