So David Pearson's Firewing treads fairly familiar ground as a two-hander between a curmudgeonly older man and a cocky young one, their initial personality clash turning into a grudging respect as they find common ground.
And all the weaker elements of the play come from how familiar this setup is, not just to the audience but seemingly to the playwright himself: We know the dynamic of this genre so well that Pearson throws us abruptly into it, with Tim impatiently snapping at Marcus and calling him an idiot within seconds of the latter first setting foot through the door.
The story continues with familiar beats - moments of connection, a tentative new trust that the younger man is planning to betray, and a revelation about just why the older one is suddenly so keen to find an heir to his legacy. But if the framework is one we've seen before at least it's executed nicely, with some snappy dialogue and a premise that, through its exploration of photographic composition and the way a single image can tell a complete story, gives quite a literal take on the idea of how we see and frame the world.
Alice Hamilton's briskly unsentimental production also helps, smoothing over some of the clumsier storytelling moments, and letting Horan and Beck build an interesting relationship. It never feels essential, but it never feels like a waste of time either.
Firewing by David Pearson is booking until the 23rd of May at Hampstead Theatre Downstairs.
Running time: 1 hour 25 minutes straight through.
Photo credit: Pamela Raith.




I think it's the writer's debut. If true, was it good as a debut?
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely got the feel of a promising early work, in that there's good dialogue and character work but some of the construction is clunky - the playwright even admits in the programme notes that his unfamiliarity with some of the technical elements left the creative team with moments that were hard to stage.
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DeleteI just saw it. I'll admit it's unfinished but it has potential. The first act is very long and choppy. I fell asleep at one point near the end of act 1 but there is great dialogue in there and I think it could make a great tv series. I could quite happily watch these two characters argue and bond in a shed for 6 episodes. Hang it around the search for the Fire wing - put that up front as the premise and each week they may or may not get close to it. I could really see it working.
ReplyDeleteAs a 85 minute play it seemed to lose its way and contained more ideas than it could hold but it definitely has great potential on TV.