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We Had a World review – a playwright torn between his warring mother and grandmother

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Hampstead theatre, LondonJoshua Harmon studies his family’s fraught matriarchal relations in this thoughtful dramaIn an empathetic act of theatrical archivism, American playwright Joshua Harmon (Bad Jews) follows the shifting, sinking relationship between his mother and grandmother. Tracing the family’s fractures back through Harmon’s life, We Had a World is a thoughtful if sedate staging of duty, care and the relational ties that can’t be shaken loose. Renee (Suzanne Bertish) is a far...

Hampstead theatre, London
Joshua Harmon studies his family’s fraught matriarchal relations in this thoughtful drama

In an empathetic act of theatrical archivism, American playwright Joshua Harmon (Bad Jews) follows the shifting, sinking relationship between his mother and grandmother. Tracing the family’s fractures back through Harmon’s life, We Had a World is a thoughtful if sedate staging of duty, care and the relational ties that can’t be shaken loose.

Renee (Suzanne Bertish) is a far better grandmother than she ever was a mother. Bertish sparkles in the freewheeling role, in turns elegant and generous, then petulant and sour. Anna Francolini has the more austere role as Josh’s mother, Ellen: sharp and stubborn, but never less than bursting with love for her son (played with sweet sincerity by Ryan Kopel). When Josh learns why his mum finds her mum so difficult to love, his relationship with his grandmother is recontextualised, and he is stuck in the middle of their war.

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Hampstead (ORG) LondonJoshua Harmon (PERSON) American (ORG) Joshua Harmon (PERSON) Harmon (PERSON) Renee (PERSON) Suzanne Bertish (PERSON) Bertish (PERSON) Anna Francolini (PERSON) Josh (PERSON) Ellen (PERSON) Ryan Kopel (PERSON)
Originally published by The Guardian UK Read original →