WORTH SINGING ALONG TO?
Ask ourselves in all honesty: did we all schlepp out to Richmond for press night because national-treasure Dame Maureen Lipman, at 80, is doing eight show a week on tour before the West End, as doughty as any McKellen? Or because it is good to see her onstage again and in something lighter after the haunting, profound solo performance she gave us in ROSE, as a Jewish woman sitting shiva for all the lost, including an Arab child killed “by my own blood”? Or is it furious solidarity, after those dim antisemitic idiot protesters demonstrated against her very existence until she has to hire security?
All very good reasons to hail this undauntable , recklessly comedy-legged empress. Moreover, this is a new play by Peter Quilter, who also wrote her the role of Florence Foster-Jenkins in GLORIOUS and promises to give her some dodgy-but-infections singing moments, only more in tune. So yes, it was a bit of all that. And Quilter’s a good name: his End of the Rainbow is just being revived after its storming 2010 performance with Tracie Bennett (though this time, naturally, it’s a drag queen as Judy Garland).
But in the end, I do not see how Quilter deserved Maureen Lipman. It is in some ways a great role for her: an elderly eccentric with a spring of personal joy and irresponsible merriment, loving bright colours, prone to bursting into song anywhere she likes. At any hour. And volume.
It’s set in her cottage kitchen , where her brother Ronen (John Middleton), a sober solar-panel salesman, tries to reorganize her and recruits a Czech housekeeper (Elizabeth Bower) to make sure she eats properly and tidies up. Her preference is always to go out and about – though we never see this – because you meet “interesting people in restaurants who don’t always want to talk. So I waltz over merrily and chat away” . She breaks into song often, just because it’s in her head, and is utterly uninhibited about time and place because “I want to try to spread joy”. She is actually mentally sharp enough – the housekeeper’s mention of Brno has her talking Mozart, and Lipman’s gift for drop-dead irony, especially about her gloomy brother, gets a good few solid laughs. At one point, in an American football number, she succeeds in leading at least a third of the audience near me in a singalong. Allegra has presence and she has nerve, and as she blithely says about her uncomfortable, shawl-draped chairs “style over substance, which is just as it should be”. As for disruption “We shouldn’t be scared of it. Some do cocaine, I do cabaret”.
But the police come round – Patrick Bailey as an improbably stolid rural cop who doesn’t mind sitting down for a cup of tea or bowl of Czech dumplings – but who eventually, after some 3 a.m. renderings of light opera have driven the neighbours craze, hauls her off to the station; the final scene begins with a looming unseen basso-profundo judge condeming her to compulsory medication as prescribed. But when it succeeds in flattening her even Ronen is dismayed , misses “all the chaos..you’re such a bright flame, that’s what everyone’s jealous of”.
It could have been interesting and convincing about dementia, socially unacceptable neurodiversity, intolerance and overmedication and the way “unhappiness is the new normal” . It should have spoken more deftly on behalf of mavericks whose only concession to reproof is to “put on a very serious cardigan”. And it really doesn’t . Every decent line Allegra is given is nailed, spot-on, by Lipman – her timing as ever magnificent – but there aren’t nearly enough of these sparks, and the other characters are oddly empty: light sketches. Some awful very old jokes around keeping a dead father’s ashes in cocoa-tins are dragged out for too long. When Lipman does hit her moments, physically dextrous in comedy as ever and fearless in wild song, the show rises up to meet her and make us happy. But in between these gaudy joyful tent-poles the structure sags dreadfully. No show should need to hang on only by one performance. Lipman deserves much, much better. The woman can tiptoe through any number of tulips, but these are plastic.
allegraplay.com to Saturday then touring Windsor, Glasgow, Bath, London to 8 Aug.
rating three







