THE ELDERLY ENDGAME
We are seated in a big arena, on three sides of a care-home sitting-room, clearly secure – staff tap door keypads – designed for the containment of dementia cases.. Two kindly careworkersare introducing Linda Bassett’s Joan, a well- spoken new resident dropped off by her anxious, nervy widowed daughter Lynn (Rosie Cavaliero) with her teenage sons. The trouble is that Joan does now know, or will not believe, that she is staying. She thinks it’s convalescence after a fall, and is not pleased .
Gradually author-director Alexander Zeldin shows us her companions and how their mental planets are varied, changeable and sometimes eventful, especially that of physically fittest and youngest, the roaming Simone (Hayley Carmichael, evoking a damaged being , arrestingly out of control). She livens things up no end with sexual dives at the visiting teenage boys and reminiscnces about lovers but having “no littluns, they all fell out”. Agnes (Ann Mitchell) talks vaguely of an otter colony she values.
So we are ,for just over two unbroken hours, in this company, watching Joan’s confusion and her gradual erosion into helplessness after moments of appearing to be a more solid piece of articulate commonsense than the daughter who can’t look after her at home (we get too little detail of why, which I suspect is to universalize the social-comment aims of the play. Certainly that is made sharply clear in a late moment, when Joan has fallen out of bed and Lynn is kvetching about paying for poor “service”. The senior nurse snaps that it’s her who is looking after Lynn’s mother…
There are some excellent lines and moments, as when Joan, clutching for memories and associations, says she feels like a dog under the table hoping to catch scraps. Bassett is excellent throughout, and there is a proper moment of emotional drama when one of the two male patients, John (a magnificent Richard Durden) moves her heart with a sudden song and then, tearing his shirt off , hugs her as he remembers a long gone wife. The days roll on; there are seceral deaths, in which characters – this is very effective – walk off to join us quietly in the audience. There is a long, long, graphically harsh-breathing deathbed for Joan, and then a coda with the family back home. And a small odd surprise, calculatedly redemptive. Though one’s sympathy by now lies entirely with the two poor lads who consider their mother Lynn “just mental”.
It’s taxing, well acted, sad. Frustrating, too, not least if you’re not in the raked seating : directors should remember that if their characters are mostly seated or wheelchair-bound that means you crane and shift desperately in order to see much. Nor does Zeldin = acknowledge much need to be a storyteller, moving things on: frankly he makes most Ibsen plays look like seat-of-the-pants thrillers.
I had bought a late matinée ticket out of fascination for him and his many enthusiasts after being lukewarm about The Confessions and Love (both NT) . I should have remembered the particular Zeldin rules: a demand for patience, attention to every nuance and long, long silence, painful compassion towards humanity and never succumbing to exasperation, even when the fourth or fifth scene change involves a blackout and a loud portentously doomy musical chord. That’s just the rulebook for the audience: his onstage characters on the other hand are allowed any amount of irrationality, temper, basic emotional incompetence and self-pity. Nothing is their fault, and if you dare mutter otherwise you’re a kind of judgmental monster. The kind who elsewhere might rudely consider the mother in Inter Alia to be a bit of a div.
In other words, Zeldin is a very modern writer. .
youngvic.org to 11 July
rating 3







