thu 14/11/2024

Faith Healer, Donmar Warehouse | reviews, news & interviews

Faith Healer, Donmar Warehouse

Faith Healer, Donmar Warehouse

Revival of Brian Friel’s 1979 classic is brilliantly acted and utterly compelling

Easy charm barely disguising self-doubt: Stephen Dillane as Frank Hardy in 'Faith Healer'Johan Persson

Oh dear. I could have sworn I had a book about Irish playwright Brian Friel somewhere. But I can’t find it. Or maybe I never bought it. Maybe I just thought I might have bought it. Maybe it’s a false memory. Better ask my wife. Now at least I’m in the zone, that place called ambiguity that is, aptly enough, one of the characteristics of Friel’s 1979 play, Faith Healer, which is being revived with a starry cast at this boutique venue.

With its themes of miracle cures, bitter exile and fallible memory, this tale is as resonant as ever. Suddenly it feels like the ideal post-Brexit play.

Frank Hardy is an Irishman who travels around the remote villages of Scotland and Wales in a battered van, offering miracle cures to the chronically sick. As this faith healer realises, in the first of the play’s four monologues, he has “a unique and awesome gift” which occasionally actually works. But he is also beset by doubts: is he, after all, just a con man? Are his infrequent successes just chance – or is he the unknowing servant of a mysterious higher power?

'Faith Healer' is also a strong metaphor for theatre

Frank’s monologue is interrupted by two other monologues, one by Grace, his wife, and the other by the Cockney Teddy, his manager. As they tell the story it slowly emerges that the most significant events of the past few years have been domestic rather than religious: the deaths of Frank’s mother and his child. But, in this study in ambiguity, there is also uncertainty: have these deaths actually happened? Who knows? Then, at the play’s climax, Frank returns to Balleybeg in Donegal, a fictional place that Friel has explored in most of his work. Here Frank’s gift for healing finally betrays him, and this homecoming returns to the spiritual, with the sacrifice of the scapegoat.

The strength of the play is that each of the monologues tells a different story. In his own eyes, Frank is troubled and noble; in his wife’s version, he is much more down to earth and fallible; and Teddy’s account is even more revealing. Which of these should we believe – all, or none of them? Friel implicitly argues that memory is uncertain, that words – which can soothe through incantation and ritual – cannot be trusted to convey the truth, and, finally, that home is as destructive as exile. Faith Healer is also a strong metaphor for theatre: Frank is an actor, a performer who relies on the uncertainties of inspiration, and Friel understands that his gift as a playwright is just as temporary, mysterious and treacherous as Frank’s for healing. The play is deeply mysterious and mysteriously deep.

At its centre are the complex relationships between the two men and one woman. The various shades of love and hate, attraction and resentment, present a tremendous challenge to any director and their actors. Lyndsey Turner’s production has a stillness that invites a theatrical miracle, and a design by Es Devlin that evokes both the endless rain that plagues touring performers and the lonely domesticity of the main characters, at least one of whom is addressing us from beyond the grave.

Stephen Dillane lends Frank a quiet charisma, with his easy charm barely disguising his self-doubt. His characteristic gestures are the hand in the jacket and the confident smirk of the maverick showman. Gina McKee (pictured above) has an attractive openness and brightness that contrasts with Dillane’s darkness, but her stiff shoulders powerfully suggest the suppression of pain. As Teddy, Ron Cook exudes the impresario’s confidence, and is of course as great a performer as his client. But his ready repartee barely conceals his desperation, which he can only control with drink. This revival is verbally hypnotic, emotionally intense and compellingly ambiguous. Plays rarely tell us so directly what it feels like to be human – this one does. And then some.

@AleksSierz

Comments

Simply the best thing I have ever seen in a theatre ever. Mesmerising. We left in near silence, could barely speak for ages except to say how much we were still caught up in it. We had gone for Ron Cook, our hero since seeing the BBC Richand III. He was impeccable, I kept looking at my watch saying, please let this not be over. And Dillane, the Master, quiet yet somehow sleekit, as we would say . And Friel, what a story, I know those boys who did the final deed, I can see them in my mind’s eye. Was there ever a performance I would dearly wish to relive again and again? This is it.

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters