Review: THE SCOTSMAN on THE PRISONER

Outside view of the Theatre for a New Audience
“Red earth of somewhere, not European…In The Prisoner, the stage has a look that has come to be associated with the work of Peter Brook…and when an elderly white man appears (an understated and slightly self-mocking Donald Sumpter), it is, indeed, to introduce a story that began for him long ago, during a journey in a distant land.
 
Outside a prison…a man sits, staring at its walls. Asked what he is doing, he says that he is there “to repair”…In this version of the story by Peter Brook and his collaborator Marie-Hélène Estienne…the audience learns almost immediately what his story is and what crime he committed.
 
It is a peculiarly shocking one, committed under shocking circumstances…a story which actually implies a consensual sexual relationship between a 13-year-old girl and her father.
 
Yet for reasons that soon become clear, the man cannot believe in himself as a righteous avenger of the girl’s abuse; in Hiran Abeysekera’s beautiful central performance, we see him, over the years, feel his way towards a resolution, through his interactions – often random, but somehow meaningful – with local people, visitors, passers-by. And the whole show, at a brief 70 minutes, achieves a magnificent balance of stillness, relaxation and narrative tension; compelling us to pause, to breathe and to reflect, but also moving the story towards its end with the inevitability and energy of a natural force, harnessed by an absolute master.”
-The Scotsman (Edinburgh)
 

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