AISLE SAY New York

THE FERRYMAN
(New Cast)

by Jez Butterworth
Directed by Sam Mendes
Featuring Brian d'Arcy James, Holley Fain, Fred Applegate
and Shuler Hensley
Bernard Jacobs Theatre
Official Website

Reviewed by David Spencer

Jez Butterworth’s The Ferryman is about as close as theatre gets to delivering a sprawling epic confined to a single evening. Set in Ireland of the 1970s, during “the troubles,” it’s part family drama—as we get to know the Carney clan, from the oldest great aunt to the youngest grandchild (an actual onstage baby), and all the parents, offspring, friends and sibling between, who live in and/or congregate in the large family farmhouse—and part thriller, as the IRA past of patriarch Quinn (Brian d’Arcy James) comes to make demands on him, long after he thought he was out and done.

            The reason I went to revisit the play was to see the largely new set of actors in lead and supporting roles—all US performers, in for the UK West End veterans of the production…and I liked it even better. By coincidence or a savvy casting director’s design, most of the new leads are drawn from the ranks of musical theatre (it’s musicals for which they are beast known, at any rate), and they’re a terrific match to the material, its predominantly Irish accents, which are themselves implicitly musical, and the sensibility, threaded with both light and mordant humor.

            Perhaps no one better exemplifies this than Fred Applegate as the avuncular anecdote-teller and philosopher Uncle Patrick. In the great tradition of American character actors with such easy command of craft that you never catch them acting, his mere entrance signals both gaiety and gravitas. As the friend who accompanied me observed, “His timing is perfect. And he knows it, And he hides that he knows it.”

            As the powerful, slow-witted neighbor Tom Kettle—very much “like one of the family” but also, in troubled times, conspicuous as the sole Englishman—Shuler Hensley dips into the reserve he keeps for characters such as Jud Fry and the monster in Young Frankenstein. It’s the kind of role he can deliver falling off the proverbial log, but there’s no sense that he’s relying on a bag of tricks. It’s a restrained, sensitive, sad-funny portrayal.

            The aforementioned Mr. James is an excellent leading-man hub for all the action; opposite the blissfully subtle Holley Fain as Caitlin (wife of Quinn’s long-missing and almost certainly dead brother) they make the restraint of unconsummated love a lesson slow-boil alchemy; and Emily Bergl, as the third triangle point, Quinn’s chronically ailing wife, is a similar study in grand contrast, creating her protective wedge with a camouflaged edge. And where would any of these folks be, dramatically speaking, without the hovering menace of the IRA crime boss? Ralph Brown’s lethally soft-spoken Muldoon provides that nicely.


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