Interview: Director Michael Cabot on ABSURD PERSON SINGULAR

Photo credit: Sheila Burnett

Photo credit: Sheila Burnett

London Classic Theatre are currently touring Alan Ayckbourn’s masterpiece of social climbing in 1970s suburbia, Absurd Person Singular. Director Michael Cabot talks about the play and getting a production up off the ground again post-lockdown.

How does it feel to finally be able to bring Absurd Person Singular to the stage again?

Tremendously exciting! It’s been such a turbulent fifteen months since we were last on tour  with the show, so to finally be in front of an audience will be fantastic. All of the original  company have come back to reprise their roles and it’s been quite emotional seeing the  team back together again.  

What is it about Absurd Person Singular that makes it such a lasting play, in your opinion?

Great writing is timeless and Alan Ayckbourn is such a unique playwright. The play comes  from the early seventies, so it’s almost fifty years since it was first produced, but the themes  and characters are still incredibly fresh for an audience today. It’s about class and social  mobility, making the right impression and keeping up appearances. Yet, in true Ayckbourn style, Alan isn’t afraid to take the action into some fairly dark places. He twists the knife  again and again, exposing the characters’ vanity and their weaknesses, so it can be both  excruciating and excruciatingly funny.  

What are you most looking forward to about going out on tour again?

Without question, being in front of an audience. The buzz of a crowd just before the lights  go down and the first ripple of laughter across the theatre. People have missed that  experience over the last fifteen months and we are so excited about sharing this play with  audiences all over the country.  

What do you hope audiences will get from watching the play? 

It’s a brilliant character study as much as anything else. Superficially, it’s a play about an  ambitious tradesman who tries to impress his bank manager and a local architect. He holds  them in very high esteem, puts them on a pedestal really, so it’s fascinating to watch as the  months pass and roles are reversed. We see that the higher status characters aren’t quite  so impressive as we first thought. Watching everything unravel, in true farcical fashion, is  very funny.  

How does it feel to be back in the rehearsal room and getting the cast and crew back  together again? 

It’s like a big family reunion! Most of the cast have worked for us before, so there’s a very  comfortable atmosphere in the room. Seeing the play come together again has been  fascinating. We didn’t know how easy it would be recreate the show after such a long time away, but everyone has worked really hard and it feels like everything has slotted into place  remarkably quickly. There are some new things happening as well, which is exciting. 

Why should audiences come to see Absurd Person Singular

It’s a great night out. Classic Alan Ayckbourn. Classic British comedy of embarrassment. It  treads a beautiful line between comedy and tragedy, and there is no better playwright to  exploit this to its full potential. Ayckbourn is our finest living playwright, a genuine national  treasure, so what better excuse to return to the theatre do you need?

For full tour dates and to book tickets, please click here.

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