Interiors
Steve Bennet - Chortle.co.uk
Not many shows start with the audience sitting on a minibus inching
its way through a traffic jam. But then the very point of Interiors,
part of the impressive new Manchester International Festival, is that
it’s not like other shows. Instead, it takes theatre out of
the theatre and into a modest, suburban semi in a secret location.
We, the 20-strong audience, are potential housebuyers, being bussed
to a viewing courtesy of estate agents Pennington Lee – named
after the comedians behind this inventive project, Stewart Lee and
Michael Pennington, or as you may better know him, Johnny Vegas.
Vegas plays Jeffrey Parkin, who’s
selling this spacious brick-built two-bed des res so he can embark
on a new life in Macedonia, where he’s bought a plot of land
on which he’s planning his dream home. Doing places up is something
of a passion of his, you see. He’s done – or at least
started - plenty of design work on this Victorian semi, which he is
more than proud to show off, from the illuminated pan rack in the
kitchen to the bespoke rootwood Coffee table that takes pride of place
in an otherwise spartan lounge. Given Vegas’s fearsome, full-on
comic persona, it’s with some trepidation that you cross his
threshold.
Being in confined quarters with a drunken, supercharged, 18 stone
of idiot is an intimidating prospect.
T hankfully, he’s not like that at all. Playing against type,
his character here is a respectable corporate troubleshooter, somewhat
nervous about having all these guests round, but generally a genial
host. When it comes to matters of taste, he does everything an aspirational
middle-class chap should. In furniture, it’s custom-made over
Ikea mass production, rare wood over MDF. In food, likewise, he prefers
exotic and organic, and in films, it’s acclaimed art-house fare
such as his favourite Farinelli: Il Castrato.
So, why, when it comes to imparting bite-sized philosophies, does
he resort to quoting Crocodile Dundee and Top Gun? For all his admirable
ambitions, is he trying to be something he’s not, living up
to the unattainable ideals of glossy style magazines rather than being
true to himself? He may be houseproud, but is he happy?
These are the questions that Interiors skilfully raises. Vegas –
whose ex-wife, coincidentally, is an interior decorator - plays Parkin
with warmth and wit, his experience on the stand-up circuit preparing
him well for the uncertainties of working so intimately with an audience.
In fact, audience seems almost the wrong word, so completely broken
down are the boundaries between punter and performer.
He offers us tea and biscuits, wine if we’d like, and people
seem perfectly happy to engage him in small talk, just as if this
was a real viewing. It is all enjoyable good-natured banter, really,
nothing much more substantial than that, until Parkin takes a phone
call that shatters his fragile veneer of happiness, and the experience
takes a turn for the dramatic. Even in his stand-up guise Vegas is
the prince of pathos, and he uses that to great effect here.
For ticket-holders, it genuinely is a unique experience, being such an integral part of the action. And the fact that this is so obviously an art-for-art’s sake project, with no hope of making much money from such small ‘audiences’ and with no obvious way to be done on any bigger scale, only adds to the special sense of occasion. Viewing recommended.











