PREVIEW DISCLAIMER: Despite already having had a full run in Bath, this doesn't seem to have invited the newspaper critics in yet.
A comedy about the Restoration, as opposed to a Restoration Comedy, although we do
see something of that genre's creation in The Libertine, a 1994 play by
Stephen Jeffreys first seen at the Royal Court and now getting a West End revival
from Terry Johnson. George Etherege's best-known work The Man of Mode* is
reputed to have been based on the real-life 2nd Earl of Rochester, John Wilmot, and
it's Rochester (Dominic Cooper) that Jeffreys puts centre-stage, a favourite of
Charles II (Jasper Britton) which is probably the only reason he managed to avoid
execution. A regular at London's playhouses, except when he's been banished to the
country for pissing off the king, at the start of the play Rochester returns from
one such involuntary trip to find a new actress in town: Lizzie Barry (Ophelia
Lovibond) is routinely booed off the stage for what, compared to the highly stylised
acting style of the time, seem like incredibly unenthusiastic performances.