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Saturday 12 December 2020 1:07 pm  |  Updated:  Tuesday 27 July 2021 5:25 pm

Catch The Dumb Waiter at Hampstead Theatre while you can

By: Steve Dinneen

Life&Style Editor

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Shane Zaza and Alec Newman in The Harold Pinter's The Dumb Waiter
Shane Zaza and Alec Newman in The Harold Pinter's The Dumb Waiter

Pinter, the greatest of modern playwrights, is probably best known for his love of a good pause. Well there have been plenty of those involved in this production of one of his most brilliant works, The Dumb Waiter. Originally slated to open in the spring, coronavirus has been jabbing at the pause button for months, and even as it finally opens, the looming threat of Tier 3 restrictions could bring that curtain swinging shut once more.

That would be a huge shame, because this two-man play about a pair of hitmen passing time in a dingy basement is a wonderful imagining of Pinter’s classic, with the nervous young Gus (Shane Zaza) especially watchable as his evening is thrown into chaos by a series of food orders mysteriously delivered by the titular dumb waiter.

This production represents both a birthday party and a homecoming for play, which returns to the home of its premier, the Hampstead Theatre, 60 years on. Thankfully it has lost none of its enigmatic power or desert-dry humour.

The last time I saw this play was as part of Jamie Lloyd’s excellent season of Pinter’s short works, with Danny Dyer appearing opposite Martin Freeman, and while this version lacks the star-power of that production (as well as the personal significance of Dyer being, rather unexpectedly, a personal friend and protege of Harold Pinter), Zaza and Newman have a wonderfully awkward chemistry. 

There’s a clear skewering of the class system at work, with the pair sent into nervous conniptions at the thought they cannot honour the dumb waiter’s demands; when “braised beef, liver and onions, scampi” is ordered, they instead send up a packet of crisps Gus had been saving.

It’s every bit as bleak and enigmatic as it was 60 years ago. Trying to decode Pinter is a futile exercise – these aren’t puzzle boxes to be solved, rather their power lies in a murkier realm of uneasy sensations and troubling emotions; they skew more towards David Lynch than they do Christopher Nolan, to use a modern parallel.

What’s for sure is this is an excellent production, well worth seeing, and given the already limited seating thanks to social distancing and the possibility that it may have to hit pause yet again, I suggest you buy a ticket sooner rather than later.

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