When work threatens to define who we are
Thrown together by their work, chefs, waitresses and porters from across Europe – English, Irish, German, Jewish – argue and flirt as they race to keep up in The Kitchen to be screened live from St James Cavalier on Thursday. Peter, a high-spirited...
Thrown together by their work, chefs, waitresses and porters from across Europe – English, Irish, German, Jewish – argue and flirt as they race to keep up in The Kitchen to be screened live from St James Cavalier on Thursday.
Peter, a high-spirited young cook, seems to thrive on the pressure. In between preparing dishes, he manages to strike up an affair with married waitress Monique, the whole time dreaming of a better life. But in the all-consuming clamour of the kitchen, nothing is far from the brink of collapse.
The Kitchen is set in 1950sLondon in the kitchen of an enormous West End restaurant. The orders are piling up: a post-war feast of soup, fish, cutlets, omelettes and fruit flans.
Arnold Wesker’s extraordinary play premiered at the Royal Court in 1959 has since been performed in over 30 countries. The Kitchen puts the workplace centre stage in a funny and furious examination of life lived at breakneck speed, when work threatens to define who we are.
A cast of over 30 actors literally chop, cut and sweat their way through a whole day in the Tivoli Restaurant. Starting early morning with the buying and preparing, to the frenzy of lunchtime through the afternoon daydream of escaping from the industrial sweatshop that is the kitchen of a majorLondon restaurant and finally to an exhausting evening meal and home, Arnold Wesker’s morality play on commerce and humanity is as strikingly relevant as when it was first performed.
And in Bijan Shelbani’s direction and with the balletic choreography of Aline Davis this production manages to celebrate the wonders of humanity as it works as a team as well as the anxiety of man as he realises that he is a mere cog in a machine.
Fast, furious, funny and at times very poignant, with a cast of memorable characters, Wesker’s play remains one of the classics of 20th century drama.
In the words of a critic from the London Times, it is “fabulous, fast-moving direction... with wit and energy it keeps you gasping.”
Catch it live at St James Cavalier, Valletta on Thursday at 8 p.m. Book online at www.sjcav.org.