Jab
by James McDermott
dir Scott Le Crass
with Kacey Ainsworth, Liam Tobin
lighting Jodie Underwood • music & sound Adam Langston
Park Theatre, London • 2-26.Apr.25 ★★★Inspired by true events, James McDermott's drama feels like a period piece, set very specifically during the pandemic. And while it nostalgically journeys through the key events and issues of those years, the focus is on a marriage that was already in trouble before lockdown pushed it over the edge. The two actors are excellent, playing the short, sharp scenes with punchy interplay that is often wordless. But the story never feels layered enough to resonate meaningfully.
It opens as NHS worker Anne (Kacey Ainsworth) starts working from home during the covid outbreak. Her well-paying job has supported raising two sons with her husband of 29 years, Don (Liam Tobin), who runs a vintage shop that doesn't bring in much. And now that it is forced to close, his only earnings are from government grants. Anne never lets Don forget that she's the breadwinner and he's a slacker. And he never shows any respect for her at all, beliveing it's her role to cook, clean and take care of his sexual needs. So it's not surprising that being stuck at home together brings larger tensions to the boil.
Much of this is very ugly, even if there are glimpses of affection and camaraderie between Anne and Don, plus some warm nostalgia when they're drinking. But there is also verbal and physical abuse. So neither is very likeable, striking low blows that cut deep as they increasingly separate from each other across the four armchairs lined up on the stark living room set. As the title suggests, vaccines play into the story, as Don refuses to get the jab, even as Anne is working in vaccination and testing centres. He resents her insisting that he should be vaccinated, when his beloved Daily Mail shouts nonstop about fake side-effects. And she tells him she'll resent him when he dies.No prizes for guessing where this goes. Director Scott Le Crass stages this cleanly in the small studio space, as events unfold in sometimes very tiny fragments over many months. Both Ainsworth and Tobin are gifted actors who are able to provide some subtext to their roles. This makes the characters intriguing, even if they're only rarely engaging. But the main problem is that this is a pointed play about the strain covid put on relationships, and it never finds much to say to us five years after the fact.
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photos by Steve Gregson • 3.Apr.25