All My Sons: REVIEWS

Powerful Arthur Miller revival featuring an outstanding performance from Sean Chapman.

Pat Ashworth – The Stage

As flawed protagonist Joe Keller, Sean Chapman is terrific. He totally convinces…

Nottingham Post

Chapman’s Joe is the anchor of the production.

Peter Kirwin – Exeunt magazine.

All My Sons review at Nottingham Playhouse – ‘an outstanding performance.’

The election of President Trump prompted Fiona Buffini to stage Arthur Miller’s ruthless dismantling of the American Dream.

It’s an intense and finely honed production with an inspired piece of casting in Sean Chapman as the self-made businessman, Joe Keller. He is so easy and comfortable in his skin, his clothes, his manner. If there were no dialogue, we’d still know that this was a man who had grafted and that his son, Chris (Cary Crankson), in his neatly pressed flannels, was a man who had not.

As the confrontations get fiercer and the truth comes out about Joe’s wartime guilt and the fate of the missing son, Chapman’s performance moves up gear after gear until the terrible end.

These are strongly drawn characters, particularly Joe’s wife, Kate, played with insight by Caroline Loncq. There’s a hard shell there that takes some breaking. Eva-Jane Willis gives a beautifully natural performance as Ann Deever, glamorous in scarlet and taking the initiative with the awkward Chris. The great topical theme of self–interest versus the common good doesn’t need any labouring. It’s evident in who these people are and how they interact.

It has its lighter moments in the lazy family banter, the comings-and-goings of the yard and the unseen life of the house – unlit until the final, dramatic moment. The storm-stricken and uprooted apple tree is the centrepiece of Dorrie Scott’s minimal set, jutting out at a right-angle on the sweep of an upward curve. Altogether a very fine piece of theatre.

Verdict
Powerful Arthur Miller revival featuring an outstanding performance from Sean Chapman
12345
Pat Ashworth – The Stage.

All My Sons ‘a fine production of an American classic.’ – Nottingham Post

The owner of a small Ohio engineering firm is living with a guilty half-secret. Seems that he and his business partner were in trouble during the recent war – this is 1947 – for turning out dud components for fighter planes. During the course of one summer’s day the whole truth is revealed, with disastrous consequences for him and his family.

But underlying the realism, All My Sons , Arthur Miller’s first success, is thematically and structurally, a Greek tragedy. It’s the final act of a drama with its origins in the past; and it involves the fall of a king, with, at the end, the promise of a new and better order to follow.

The set provides more than a hint of the sort of play this is going to be. A stereotypical middle-class American house is centre stage, painted white, with a front porch – all’s well and good. But at its side is an apple tree, half blown out of the ground.

As flawed protagonist Joe Keller, Sean Chapman is terrific. He total convinces as an unsophisticated and under-educated self-made man. But his pugnacious turns of phrase betray underlying unease and insecurity, which come increasingly nearer the surface as the play proceeds.

Cary Crankson, tall and rangy, is perfectly cast as his son Chris. A realist, who half-suspects the awful truth, he’s struggling to reconcile conflicting duties to those he loves, including his sweetheart Ann (Eva-Jane Willis in a fine performance). Kate Keller, unable to accept the finality of a bereavement and striving to hold the family together, is also beautifully played by Caroline Loncq.

The message is unmistakeable. The individual has clear moral obligations to his family, for sure. But these extend to the wider community, to the world at large.

This is a fine production of an American classic.

Devastating and dignified: Peter Kirwan reviews Fiona Buffini’s timely revival of Arthur Miller’s classic American drama.

Dorrie Scott’s set for Fiona Buffini’s new production of Arthur Miller’s All My Sons is dominated by two opposing structures. On the one side, the facade of a stable, clean house, built on the labours of Sean Chapman’s patriarch Joe and standing proud. On the other side, a sprawling apple tree planted for Joe and his wife Kate’s lost son, broken and falling into the back yard, its branches dangling into characters’ faces. The tree’s fall in the storm has pulled up the very stage itself; it curls upwards, revealing the mess of roots under the foundations. The image of a strong and stable family is undermined from the very start.

The choice of All My Sons was apparently inspired by Trump’s election, and the thematic links are there to be found, from a plot hinging on neglected responsibilities, to the constant search for someone to blame, to the hypocrisy of those who claim to be acting on behalf of the common person. But this production isn’t interested in big-P politics so much as in people, and Buffini’s subtle direction highlights the emotional stakes as a family are torn apart by the exposure of their world’s foundations.

Chapman’s Joe is the anchor of the production. With an East Coast clip and a blue-collar attitude, he dominates the backyard with a practised charm and a performance of his own ‘dumbness’. His neighbours question the route by which he came to his wealth, but in his own garden (which visitors have to enter via the porch of his house), he can relax away from prying eyes. When challenged, though, the steely businessman snaps into life, a simple commanding shout or, more sinisterly, a firm handshake and a “You know what I’m talking about” cowing those around him into submission. Disarming and disquieting, even as the scale of his earlier crimes is revealed, it seems impossible that anyone could shake his world.

But into the atmosphere of managed pleasantry that Joe has inculcated chime the voices of the play’s women in a series of outstanding performances. Particularly impressive is Shauna Shim’s Sue, who does wonders with a tiny part. A delightful conversation over a glass of grape juice with Eva-Jane Willis’s Ann turns into a barbed and then openly confrontational attack, as Sue orders Ann to take her fiancé far away and reveals her true feelings about Joe and Kate.

Willis herself carries a great deal of the play’s emotional weight: mourning Larry, lost in the war some years ago; getting engaged to his brother Chris (Cary Crankson); dealing with the imprisonment of her father, jailed for selling faulty plane parts that resulted in the deaths of several airmen; and being challenged throughout the play with the accusation that it was Joe, not her father, who was ultimately responsible. Willis balances perfectly Ann’s grief, honesty and self-determination, ensuring that she is never merely the victim of the emotional revelations but is always actively fighting for what she wants.

Caroline Loncq’s Kate is built up long before she first appears, with stories of her standing sobbing in the garden as the tree blew over in the preceding night. Her matter-of-fact practicality, easy wit and love for her family are endearing, but Loncq’s real achievement is in the delicacy with which she lets the cracks show. When she and Ann first meet, she implores Ann to agree with her that she is still waiting for the lost Larry; Ann’s gentle refusal, and her insistence that Larry is dead, are devastating. Loncq simultaneously does and doesn’t hear it, her world incapable of resolving itself to the idea; yet Ann’s kind but firm insistence on moving on is equally immovable. The tension between the two women, leading to Kate’s more erratic actions and outbursts later in the play, is knife-edge, the veneer of hospitality always forestalling histrionics.

The catalyst for the second half is the sudden – and quite brief – arrival of Ben Lee’s George, Ann’s brother, fresh from seeing his jailed father and hearing his side of the story. Lee, like the rest of the cast, is excellent, a nervous mess of angry, upset energy that he can’t direct properly. Watching Joe and Kate take him firmly in hand, with a combination of subtle displays of power, manipulative reminiscences, and gestures of acceptance within a family, is at times breathtaking; George’s energy drains away and leaves him looking physically smaller, at least until a throwaway remark rekindles his fire.

As the play rattles towards its final revelations and more emphasis is placed on Chris’ response to his father’s past actions, it loses some of its earlier subtlety, but by this time the sterling work of the first two acts has established all the necessary investment, and the final moments are shocking and perfectly fitting. The conflicts between business and patriotism, the self-made and the selfless, the conscience and the hand that feeds you, find a human face in this production, and the end result is both moving and dignified.

PETER KIRWAN

 

Royal Shakespeare Company: REVIEWS

HENRY lV

“Sean Chapman as Northumberland, mourning the death of his son, nearly breaks down, then hauls himself back to soldierly resolve in an impressive single-scene revelation of complexity of character.”

John Sobel – OFF ON Theatre Reviews.

Richard ll

“Even better casting is Sean Chapman as a wolfish Northumberland, when he stands at the castle gates waiting for Richard to surrender he positively licks his lips.”

Louis Wise – Sunday Times

“As Northumberland, the fine Sean Chapman…”

Charles Isherwood – New York Times

Henry V

“The Duke of Exeter, Sean Chapman, in a performance that rings with pitiable truth.”

Paul Edmondson – The Stage

 

Major Theatre, Film & TV Credits

THEATRE

Sean has worked extensively at The National Theatre, The Royal Shakespeare Company and in London’s West End. His leading roles at the National Theatre include Prior Walter in the Pulitzer Prize winning Angels in America, The Prince’s Play, Rutherford and Son. He starred as Steven in the World Premier of Hanif Kureishi’s Sleep With Me. His work in the West End includes Single Spies, Me and Mamie O’Rourke (with Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders) Certain Young MenA Prayer for my Daughter, and as Sy Spector in the original London production of The Bodyguard. Most recently, in 2017, he gained critical acclaim for his leading performance as Joe Keller in Arthur Miller’s All My Sons.

In 2013-16 he joined the Royal Shakespeare Company giving 505 performances during their season of Shakespeare’s history plays: Northumberland in Richard ll with David Tennant; Northumberland and the Earl of Douglas in Henry lV (pt 1&2) with Anthony Sher, and as Exeter in Henry V, performing in Stratford, London (Barbican), Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and New York (BAM Harvey Theatre).

FILM

Includes Scum, The Fourth Protocol, Hellraiser, Hellbound, Tangier Cop, Gangster No 1, A Mighty Heart, Seven Days to Live, One of the Hollywood Ten, The Sea Change and, most recently, two films for indie director Reg Travis: Joy Division and Psychosis.

TV 

His television work is extensive and includes an award winning performance as The Commander in BBC TV’s iconic Contact and Channel 4’s seminal Made In Britain (both for the renowned director Alan Clarke). Other leading roles in television include Danny Monk in No Further Cause for Concern, Tom Riley in BBC TV’s The Black and Blue Lamp, Commander Mills in Kavannagh QC, and Ben Ellington in 7 episodes of the ITV series Ellington. Other TV work includes Trial & Retribution, and seasons with French and Saunders and Absolutely Fabulous. Most recently Sean featured as Barrister Mark Metzler in the legal thriller series The Case, also for the  BBC.

 

Working Shots

As The Earl of Northumberland: Henry lV – Royal Shakespeare Company
As The Commander: Contact
As Tom Riley – The Black and Blue Lamp
The Sea Change Movie Poster.
As Joe Keller – All My Sons
Uncle Frank: Hellraiser
The Earl of Douglas (with mace): Henry lV – Royal Shakespeare Company
As Frank Cotton: Hellraiser

Poster for Hanif Kureishi’s Sleep With Me: World Premiere – Royal National Theatre
As the Commander: Contact – BBC TV.

As Prior Walter (with Marcus D’amico as Louis): Angels in America – Royal National Theatre

As Wickham: Pride&Prejudice – Birmingham Rep/Old Vic
Poster for Angels in America: Original RNT Production
Prior Walter: Angels in America – RNT
Prior Walter and the Angel: Angels in America – RNT

Press & Media Links

 

CONTACT.

http://www.britishtelevisiondrama.org.uk/?p=2931

Extensive article about the making of BBC TV’s award winning drama, Contact.

The Black and Blue Lamp

 

From The Blue Lamp to The Black and Blue Lamp: The Police in TV Drama

Extensive analysis of this controversial BBC TV Play.

http://www.the-mausoleum-club.org.uk/Index/Gazette/Black%20and%20Blue%20Lamp.pdf

Ben Lawrence of the Telegraph interviews Sean about playing Prior Walter in the original NT staging of Angels In America.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/theatre/what-to-see/never-knew-gay-men-could-love-britain-brought-angels-america/

 

A 2005 Op-Ed piece by Sean in the Guardian about the state of film funding in the UK.

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2005/aug/13/comment.features

Here we go again: rumours in the press matched by “industry” figures showing that the British film industry had a “good” year in 2004. My own recent experiences of low- to mid-budget film-making in this country give me great cause for alarm.

I’ve lost count of how often a call from my agent about a meeting for a “British” film is prefixed by: “Oh, they don’t have any money…” This usually means that “they” – a small-scale production company – have enough money to cobble a film deal together but don’t want to spend it on anything as wasteful as actors; it usually means “they” haven’t spent any money on script development either, and certainly haven’t budgeted for any rehearsals.

It’s perfectly possible for trained actors to arrive on a set and shoot a scene rapidly with people they’ve never met, speaking lines from a script that is barely literate; but I wouldn’t recommend it. Nevertheless, it’s current practice. Most of the time it shows.

Today’s film students often come from technical backgrounds in which the “soft” elements of storytelling are a mystery. Unless you’ve been in a decent rehearsal, where do you learn the craft of coaxing a leading performance? Without theatre or TV training, film students have no knowledge of how to interact creatively with actors. We must bring this into their training.

Time and again some woefully inexperienced director “helms” a poorly budgeted movie, billed by the complicit industry press as a plucky “first-timer”. In practice this usually means that a desperate twentysomething directs a film for no fee, payment deferred until some chimeric profit margin is reached. An inefficient funding system consisting of international presales and ad-hoc instalment plans means that even low-budget films are made in a compromising atmosphere of constant hysteria.

Too many films in this country scramble into production on a suicidally inadequate second draft, and this recipe of low budget, inexperienced director and half-baked script is devastating. Until we regain foundation habits of teaming well-crafted screenplays with experienced directors we will never be able to build a sustainable national production base. British audiences are forever being served up the cinematic equivalent of the Turkey Twizzler, and film-makers everywhere must ask themselves: “Before I make it, would I buy it?”

I propose packages such as a Tom Stoppard screenplay shot by Nic Roeg. Perhaps a Hanif Kureishi script in the hands of Danny Boyle or Sally Potter. Is that so impossible? Are there really no backers for options like these? We have to focus on utilising such experience while our younger film-makers serve their apprenticeships working on films of integrity.

Film-making is a hi-tech industry being run in the UK as a jumble sale. The Bafta denizens who’ve made fortunes out of their executive posts while presiding over the collapse of the industry must invest available funds not in luncheons but in training, connecting film students with writers, actors and experienced producers, immediately.

John Walsh interviews Sean for The Independent about A Prayer for My Daughter (Young Vic) and his novel, ‘A Distant Prospect.’

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/features/interview-sean-chapman-777626.html

The scene on stage is tense. It’s the night of 5 July, sometime in the 1970s, and in a New York precinct, four men are in an interrogation room. Two are cops, Kelly and Delasante, and two are suspected murderers – one a punk kid called Jimmy “Rosehips” Rosario, the other Sean, a bearded, middle-aged teacher. The latter are wanted for pumping old Mrs Linowitz full of lead; the former are not averse to beating seven shades of ordure out of them to get a confession.

The opening of A Prayer for My Daughter, revived by the Young Vic, is classic police procedural stuff, all wisecracks, threats, verbal fencing and people saying “son of a bitch”. But gradually the dialogue changes, and in Act II, when Sean recalls his pietà-like encounter with a dead soldier, over whom he wept for 12 hours, we hit an extraordinary moment. Sean tells the cop: “There’s a woman inside me, officer, and she aches for the men she has known.”

It’s electrifying, not just for the line’s bittersweet melancholy, but because it issues from the lips of Sean Chapman, an English actor who’s long been a byword in tough-bastard masculinity

The stage crackles with unspoken desires and impulses as he and Corey Johnson (playing Delasante) fence and parry, and the burly Brooklyn-voiced toughnuts struggle with a vulnerability they’ve never confronted before. By the end, each of the four men will have spoken about a daughter – real or imaginary – with whom he has a transcendent, healing relationship.

It’s a remarkable drama, written in 1977 by Thomas Babe, who was obsessed with American notions of heroism and masculinity and the uncertain emotions that lie behind them. He wrote about strained family relationships and the ways right and wrong are perceived. But didn’t his characters come across as just a little peculiar?

“The Greenwich Village audience in 1977, for whom Babe was writing,” Chapman says, “would have had a working knowledge of all the people on-stage, and the context of their lives. It was a ‘Nam world, a world in flux, where things changed quickly, where the police were as bent as the people on the street. His play catches the essence of people wondering, ‘Where’s the morality gone? What’s the code now?’ So when you’re preparing the character, you’re always looking for the back-story.”

So how do we take the character of Sean, the teacher and manipulator of street kids? Do we assume he’s gay, bisexual, a furtive transsexual? For Chapman, the question is crucial. “I think what Babe is saying is: until we go beyond all these labels, and stop seeing each other in such terms, we’re screwed. The cops at the start see the two suspects as gay junkies, and it gives them permission to deal with them as they like. Babe is saying that kind of morality is redundant.

“It’s a play about a masculinity I recognise today. My experience of men, when I’m with actors and writers, is that there’s an inner emotional life we all share. When I’m with men on the street, all that’s invisible. If you’re not talking about Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, or about the latest figures in the City, you’re not talking about anything.”

So what will save us men? “The heart of the play is, I think, about finding your feminine side. Of course, that’s just another label. What we mean by a ‘feminine’ side is a creative, sensitive, alert, general awareness of the world. We’ve delegated the responsibility of sensitive reactions and intuitions to the women and said, ‘Sorry, no, we men don’t do that.’ Babe is saying that, unless we embrace these intuitions, we’re only half alive.”

It’s extraordinary to find such a soft, thoughtful, London delivery issuing from the large, truculent longshoreman you’ve just seen in rehearsal. Chapman is 46, and has been a professional actor since he was a teenager. His career has been crazily eclectic: from appearing in tiny provincial theatres in Yorkshire to the National, where he starred in the epic Angels in America in 1991, to playing dangerous-looking heavies on TV in Murphy’s Law and Silent Witness. He hasn’t set foot on stage since 2006, when he was in David Hare’s adaptation of Gorky’s Enemies at the Almeida; but he recently appeared with Angelina Jolie in last summer’s A Mighty Heart, playing an American journalist.

The ups and downs of acting work is a leitmotif in his conversation, and has prompted him to write a cautionary tale. His first novel, A Distant Prospect, currently being offered around British publishers by Ed Victor, tells the story of Riley, a talented actor who struggles to keep solvent and feed his costume-designer girlfriend and her baby.

It is, you won’t be amazed to learn, based to a large degree on Chapman’s life. “To survive as an actor when you’re young, you need massive amounts of adrenalin and commitment and you make the best of everything,” he says. “Then you become less disposed to take everything you’re offered. I’ve spent some miserable times doing rep in regional theatres. You find yourself in Huddersfield on a wet Wednesday afternoon, you’re in a bad play with people you don’t get on with, you’re 25… That is pretty wrist-slashing stuff.”

He pauses. “Now, after a gig like the Young Vic, I might not be in work for four months, then someone will ring and say, ‘Look, there’s an episode of Heartbeat…’ and you have to make a quantitative decision about whether there’s enough money in the bank for you to be able to turn it down.

Wasn’t there a qualitative decision to make as well? Like, say, doing Heartbeat, but not The Bill? “The real question is: if I’m not going to enjoy myself, what’s the point? When you’re on the journey out, in your twenties and thirties, when you’re married with young children, you’ll do anything. But part of the reason I wrote the book is that I want young actors, starting out now, to see that qualitative judgements aren’t possible any longer.”

Chapman’s career started with a bullet at 17, when he landed a role in the film Scum. He was born in Greenwich, London, in 1961 but his childhood was blighted by parental absence (“My father arrived at the hospital where I was born, put down his suitcase and said to my mother, ‘I told you it was the baby or me, you’ve had your warning, that’s it'”) and poverty. “In the early Sixties, we were plunged into this Cathy Come Home thing. It wasn’t glamorous to be a single parent. The old man never contacted us or paid a penny in maintenance.”

Sent to a comprehensive, Chapman turned up only for English and drama classes. A stage school saved him. “We dragged the cash together. The fees were £60 a term, and I felt incredibly at home there.”

Then an agent phoned Chapman and told him that the director Alan Clarke was casting a Borstal movie. “Alan sat me down and said, [Chapman’s Merseyside accent is perfect] ”Ave you ‘ad a chance to look at the script?’ I said, yes. He said, ‘You know there’s a difficult scene in the greenhouse? We think you’re the guy for that. How do you feel?’ I said, ‘I’ll do it.'” He beams. “Imagine – the first job I get, I’m shafting someone up the arse in a greenhouse, then going back to school.”

But he loved working with Clarke, whom he reveres for “his openness and generosity”. The master of Northern realism was clearly a surrogate father.

Thus fledged, he found himself stuck in tough-guy roles for years: in Made in Britain, The Fourth Protocol, For Queen & Country, Gangster No 1, Hellbound, Hellraiser… Frankly, it was a relief to get to the National, playing a gay man dying of Aids.

Typecasting still bothers him: “I want to say, ‘Look, there are other colours and other sizes, and if I can’t play them, I won’t play at all.'” A complex fellow, Chapman: a big, sensitive chap with a parent-sized hole in his heart, who, after 30 years playing tough guys, is now impersonating a man discovering his inner weeping woman.

Oh, and one of his two daughters has started work experience at the National, just as he’s about to publish a novel warning actors of the frustration and insolvency of the profession. Themes of masculinity and parenthood seethe around his head, as they have seethed through his career, and now through the play he’s in. No wonder he’s so good in it.

‘A Prayer for My Daughter’ is at the Young Vic, London SE1 (020-7922 2922; www.youngvic.org)

 

Egg and Chips with Darth Vadar

Me, and Darth.

Sean Chapman as Frank Cotton in Clive Barker’s Hellraiser

 


I was recently asked to attend a Film and Comic Con in Sheffield where I met a myriad of Hellraiser fans, signed autographs, and pressed the flesh.

To my great pleasure I found I was sharing a hotel breakfast with David Prowse (Darth Vadar, to you.) So I’ll always be able to say I’ve had egg and chips with the Dark Lord of the Universe. Thanks, Darth – it was a blast!