Reviews of Fringe Theatre Edinburgh Fringe, Brighton Fringe, Dublin Theatre Festival
Search


Options
Broadway Baby helps you choose your Fringe programme by making suggestions based on the recommendations of other users with similar tastes. You can also hook up with people on the Fringe and make your visit a whole lot more social.
Broadway Baby is the premier online website for Fringe reviews at the Edinburgh Festival


Boys Of The Empire
Email
Password

forgot password?
Reviews Edinburgh Fringe Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Dean's Ad

“Everybody in his stories gets naked or dead”

Killer Joe 4-Star Rated

Killer Joe

(2007)
The Comedians Theatre Company
Pleasance Courtyard. 4-27 August (not 15). 18:00 (1hr30)
Printer Friendly



The author’s mother is responsible for the above quote. She is also a playwright and once commented that in her work she tries to remain upbeat and funny almost by way of compensation for her son’s work! This example of son Tracy’s writing has comic moments, but generally delivers on the maternal assessment – it’s savage, disturbing and sometimes downright frightening, with a last beat which makes the final scene of Hamlet resemble a small family squabble.

The plot is set spinning within the first few minutes, Letts taking little time setting the scene. That scene is a trailer in a Texas park inhabited by the revolting Smith family. Young Chris Smith (Ed Weeks) needs to get hold of $6000 or his creditors will kill him. With his father Ansel he decides to murder his mother for what, he has been told, is a sizeable life insurance policy. They agree to hire Joe Cooper, a police detective with a sideline in contract killing.

Tony Law is suitably still and menacing as Killer Joe, whose arrival embroils the entire family in a sordid pact involving lies, rape, violence and a particularly heart-breaking and disturbing betrayal of the young daughter Dottie (a beautifully truthful performance from Charlotte Joe Hanbury). Letts wrote this play in 1991 when he a was a confessed alcoholic and its action and language is full of a desperate rage, which Maggie Inchley’s direction ramps up to fever pitch. However, some of the latter action was sloppy, and under rehearsed, and a vital prop failing to function properly in the final moments nearly reduced proceedings to farce.

This show is performed by the Comedians’ Theatre Company who brought us last year’s over hyped and overrated Talk Radio. This is far superior. For the most part the acting is fine, though it is the women in the cast who really shine, Lizzie Roper providing a brash, though ultimately terrified and terrifying performance as Sharla, the step-mother. It’s interesting that she and Hanbury are the two performers with an acting rather than comedy pedigree. I’m afraid it does show, not least in their ability to know when the focus is not on them.

That said, this is a truly wonderful play, inhabiting Tennessee Williams territory both geographically and emotionally, and this production is worth seeing for the committed performances and writing that is sometimes brilliant in it’s simplicity:

“Nothing’s worse that regrets, not cancer, not being eaten by a shark.” [Robin T. Barton]

show info
Killer Joe
The Comedians Theatre Company

Director:
Maggie Inchley

Theatre:
Pleasance
Preview Aug 1-3: 18:00(1hr 30mins) £5.00 Aug 4,7-9,13-14,16,20-23,27: 18:00(1hr 30mins) £10.00(£8.50) Aug 5-6: 18:00(1hr 30mins) £10.00 A
33


top rated
The Terrible Infants
5-Star Rated
The Terrible Infants
2008
Fantastical Fairytales

The Country
4-Star Rated
The Country
2008
"As spacious as the countryside itself"

Bite-Sized: Sunday Lunch Hour Menu
4-Star Rated
Bite-Sized: Sunday Lunch Hour Menu
2008
Full of Nourishment

Red
4-Star Rated
Red
2008
Unfair to Love in War

see all reviews...

© 1999-2008 Web Editors Ltd, All Rights Reserved. Registered in England and Wales No. 62976778. VAT No. GB 913 5714 33