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Sunday, November 11, 2012

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Written for Time Out
Wanda June herself scarcely appears in Kurt Vonnegut’s first play. Run over by an ice-cream van on her 10th birthday, she’s in heaven. Playing shuffleboard with a Nazi major.

Instead, her uncollected birthday cake turns up at a celebration in honour of Second World War hero Harold Ryan (Vincent Jerome). Missing presumed dead, he returns to his prissy suburban family after eight years in the jungle - balls swinging like a Newton's Cradle - to wrench his wife (Alix Dunmore) from her hippyish new fiancé and drill his sap of a son into shape.

Loosely based on the story of Odysseus's homecoming and set in '60s America, Vonnegut's 1970 play regards unchecked masculinity with characteristic disdain. The cross-gender casting of this rare revival perhaps overcooks the sexual politics, but it instils a cartoonish vigour into Ant Stones's production. The net effect is something like A Doll's House after botched hormonal therapy and a fistful of valium.

Still, Vonnegut remains too much a novelist. Character leads where action ought and there's too little dramatic impetus to build a head of steam. His scorched sardonic humour, however, remains as gratifying as ever and it's clearly relished by an animated cast. Particular treats are Emma-Jane Martin's finicky vacuum cleaner salesman and Marcus Powell's dopey ex-airman, fresh from Nagasaki and full of regret.

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