The production on display
this evening is “Love n Stuff” which is a two-hander created by playwright
Tanika Gupta. The writing here feels
very much like it was meant to showcase two very capable actors who are not
only extremely versatile but also have a significant amount of on-stage
chemistry and cohension.
Gupta takes two characters
from her 2021 musical (Wah! Wah! Girls) and puts them into a beautifully
constructed scenario about their marriage, their own identity as Indians living
in the UK, and their wider family and neighbours. The two characters are long-time-married
couple Mansoor (Maanuv Thiara) and Bindi (Komal Amin) and the setting is
Terminal 3 at Heathrow Airport – the set is wonderfully constructed and very
much in keeping with the airport itself and the style of signage. As a frequent visitor to the airport this
attention to detail is not lost on me and makes me take notice even before the
performance begins.
Muslim husband Mansoor and Hindu wife Bindi
have been married for 35 years but all is not well in their marriage with
Mansoor waiting at the airport to return to India having left a rather brief
note for Bindi stating his reasons as “having had enough of this country” and
being fed up with “this cold island” and longing for the sunshine and tropical
climate of India. The flight is delayed
which allows Bindi to confront Mansoor with some hilarious consequences
underlining what is clearly a very serious situation.
There are a number of
other characters in the play (obviously played by Thiara and Amin) including
airport announcers for the constant delays, a loud and brash American woman
arguing with her husband, a peanut seller, a drunk traveller who has already
missed his flight, a posh dad, an hilarious perfume seller from Duty Free and
Ruby the hippie, to name but a few. Thiara and Amin are so comfortable switching between characters on
stage and they do this with flawless brilliance, not once is the audience
confused about which character is speaking and the way they adopt such
brilliant mannerisms for each character again shows off their considerable
talent.
The review would not be
complete without the special mention for two additional characters of Farooq (Amin)
and Janice (Thiara) who are the couple’s lodgers and have been brought in to
convince Mansoor to stay at home – both actors playing the opposite role you
might expect. They almost steal the show
with their hilarious lines and actions trying to formulate a plan to keep
Mansoor in this country. These would be
absolute show stealers if it wasn’t for a neighbourhood teenager called Baggy (Amin)
who speaks like a black Brit from South London and uses language that would
only be meaningful to someone of that age – Mansoor’s constant confused
expression just makes the scenes with Baggy even more hilarious.
Overall this is a superbly written 90 minute play with all of the satire of a modern multi-cultural, multi-ethnic and multi-national extravaganza but is just plain enjoyable and funny. It pokes fun at the Indian culture and the British culture with the same vigour but does so without making this a focal point for the performance – however, the acting performances are the overriding memory of what “Love n Stuff” is all about and that’s what I take away from this production.
Reviewer - John Fish
on - 21.9.21
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