Saturday, 28 November 2020

THEATRE REVIEW: Death Of England: Delroy - The National Theatre, London.


Usually, it takes months to prepare for a NT Live production, but the dedicated team at National Theatre reduced that to days, because of the announcement of the second national lockdown. This quick turnaround was a fantastic effort, even when things are bleak.

In a recently re-configured Olivier Theatre, Michael Balogun gave an impassioned performance as Delroy in a new play by Clint Dyer and Roy Williams. Dyer was also the Director. Authenticity through conveying an unfiltered black British person’s experience was integral to this theatrical response to the Black Lives Matter Movement. The theatre-in-the-round staging heightened this sense of ‘no holding back’ storytelling in a literal and metaphorical political arena.  

“Keep your social racial distance please”, exclaimed a sinister automated voice in the opening moments. Highlighting how our country is divided in many ways. Set during the Coronavirus pandemic, this was a bang up-to-date story of a black working class man living in England, seeking the truth, and confronting his relationship with Great Britain. The story centered on a tragically all-too-familiar incident of racial profiling by the police, resulting in an innocent Delroy missing the birth of his baby.

Balogun’s accomplished central performance was unapologetically fiery, angry, and gutsy. His complete focus and natural ability to engage with the audience was impressive – even getting the audience to talk back to him. Breaking the fourth wall at its finest. The performance was playfully varied in tone, voice, and movement which brought the play's text to life.  

Designer, Sadeysa Greenaway-Bailey created a set made up of two catwalks crisscrossing each other. I wasn’t totally sure what it was trying to represent: maybe it was meant to be a symbol of the English flag? Or, was the set attempting to encapsulate a divided England, ultimately risking its own death? The pillars were effective because they immediately brought to mind the pulling down of Edward Colston’s statue, during the anti-racism protest in Bristol. It is estimated that Colston trafficked around 80,000 men, women and children from Africa to the Americas in the 17th Century. Several props which visually mapped out the narrative of the play were placed on these pillars. However, I think more could have been done to mark these moments.

Clinical, disturbing, and nightmarish lighting was commonly used by Jackie Shemesh throughout. Barndoors were fixed onto the front of the stage lights to shape the lighting precisely with Balogun looking like he was claustrophobically boxed in. A literal prison and a metaphorical one as a result of restrictions on civil liberties. In Delroy’s case, it wasn’t just Coronavirus restricting what he could and couldn’t do. Whenever Delroy quoted the words of another character, the lighting would switch cleanly to punctuate the change in speaker - this gave the production momentum.  

In conclusion: “Death of England: Delroy” was a timely, politically-fueled, and vital play. The text had the right balance of factual and emotional language with plenty of honesty and self-reflection. To quote Eckhart Tolle: “To reduce the aliveness of another human being to a concept is already a form of violence”. Black lives still matter.

Reviewer - Sam Lowe
on - 27/11/20

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