This time around, The Cottesloe
has been transformed into a private clinic.
Except it isn’t a normal clinic but one where they carry out drug
trials. As I overheard a lady saying
during the interval, why would anyone put themselves through such a thing,
especially when the play write, Lucy Prebble, of Enron fame, eloquently shows us
what can go wrong. Of course this is
fiction, but fiction of the powerful kind that makes one think about the
subject long after the viewing has ended.
This particular drug trial is
concerned with finding a cure for depression and Billie Piper, playing a
psychology student called Connie and Jonojo O’Neill as Tristan, a laid back
Northern Irish drifter, are two of the guinea pigs. Their mutual attraction is apparent from the
onset of the play and they constantly flirt with one another. The two trialists are under the constant
supervision of medic, Lorna, played by a nervy, humourless Anastasia Hille,
who, in turn, reports back to the smug, self-important Doctor Toby played by Tom
Goodman-Hill. It is evident quite early
on that these two doctors have a history, which has left Lorna less than happy
with its outcome.
Having passed the preliminaries,
Connie and Tristan are accepted onto the trial and so they begin a course of
daily doses of a dopamine based antidepressant.
As the trial progresses, their dosage is increased and what started out
as mutual infatuation, turns into full-blown feverish love. But is the love real or the result of them
taking the drug? Come to that is one of
them actually only ingesting a placebo and, if so, which one? And, in the grand scheme of things, does it
really matter if the couple cannot altogether trust their feelings, given that
brain chemicals are what make us fall for one another in the first place? All questions that make you think whilst watching
the four actors faultlessly portray their characters.
There is one scene that for me is
the highlight of an otherwise nearly perfect play. Tristan and Connie have escaped the “big
brother” atmosphere of the main clinic and find themselves in a large, unused
room. Here, Tristan courts a more
cautious Connie by doing an impromptu tap dancing routine to the strains of I’ve
Got You Under My Skin. The wooing is so
successful that the growing intensity of their feelings for one another is
palpable and I’m sure I won’t be the only female that is likewise charmed.
Their growing love affair is
cleverly balanced by the very unsuccessful relationship between the two
Doctors. It transpires that Lorna who is
skeptical about the use of anti-depressants actually drove Toby away because
she herself suffers from depression.
The four actors cannot be
faulted. Billie Piper and Jonjo O’Neill
are superb and compliment each other perfectly.
One totally believes in their burgeoning love affair as surely as one
cannot imagine Tom Goodman-Hill playing anything other than super-smug. And surely Anastasia-Hille really does have
depression problems? As despair
threatens to overcome her character, Lorna, she manages to seemingly bring a corpse-like
intensity to her complexion. Meanwhile
Mirian Buether’s design perfectly portray the luxuriousness of the private
clinic, whilst, when required, Jon Clark’s lighting imparts an unreal calm and
Rupert Goold’s direction is spot on.
This is a play to make you think
and enjoy in equal measure.