Review: DOUBLE FEATURE at Hampstead Theatre
Date: 19th February 2024
Seat: N2 (Stalls)
Tickets: Gifted
Rating: 2 Stars
Two directors and two actors walk into a room… it sounds
like the beginning of a joke, but it’s actually the setup for John Logan’s Double
Feature, currently playing at Hampstead Theatre. And whereas a joke would
be funny (ideally, at least), Double Feature is a serious look at the
dynamics between said directors (Alfred Hitchcock and Michael Reeves) and
actors (Tippi Hedren and Vincent Price).
The idea is a clever one – we have two sets of people (Hitch
(Ian McNeice) and Hedren (Joanna Vanderham) in one story and Reeves (Rowan
Polonski) and Price (Jonathan Hyde) in another) acting out a rehearsal scene
for the movies they happen to be working on (Marnie and The
Witchfinder General respectively), and although they’re all on stage at the
same time, they’re not there together. The two pairs never acknowledge one
another, and the stories play out separately, intertwining without any of the
characters knowing it.
Sounds complicated, doesn’t it? The fact is, the conceit
does work at times, and it works very nicely – when all four characters are
sitting at the same kitchen table eating two separate meals and having a
conversation that they all take part in, even if they’re in different places at
different times, it’s a clever way to show the differences in the
relationships, for example. However, at other times it just felt as though it
was being too clever for its own good, the conceit just there as a gimmick
rather than being a useful plot device or having any real meaning.
Which is the main issue I had with Double Feature. It
could have been an interesting way to show two different sides to a problem,
and I feel that’s what the aim was – a director and an actor with creative and
personal issues between them, each trying to come up with a way of working
together – but because there were no stakes here (we know that Vincent Price
went on to complete The Witchfinder General, the film he’s threatening
to walk off after arguing with Reeves, and we know that Alfred Hitchcock never
did make Mary Rose, the film he dangled over Tippi Hedren’s head as he
demanded she go to bed with him or he would ruin her career), none of it really
matters. There’s no character development and not much of a story. It’s a
character study, and that’s not quite enough to sustain the 95-minute run time.
Of the two stories, it was the Hitchcock/Hedren element that
held my attention the most. It showed the darker side of the famous director,
but it also showed Tippi Hedren to be a strong and capable woman, able to stand
up to the bullying and predatory Hitchcock. Joanna Vanderham’s performance was
exceptional, and she certainly stood out, pulling focus at all times when she
was on the stage. Despite valiant efforts by Hyde and Polonski, I found myself
wanting to get back to the other storyline as quickly as possible, and I wonder
if focusing on just one of the stories and making a play out of that might have
worked better; there would certainly have been more time to get to know each character (as it stands, the
audience does have to have at least a working knowledge of who everyone is and
their filmographies).
Despite an impressive set by Anthony Ward and excellent lighting by Hugh Vanstone, along with some great choices by director Jonathan Kent, the story and characters in Double Feature just weren’t enough to make it shine.
Double Feature plays at Hampstead Theatre until 16th March: https://www.hampsteadtheatre.com/whats-on/2023/double-feature/
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