Beautiful Thing is the first production of the year at the Milnerton Playhouse. Written by Jonathan Harvey and directed by Johann van der Merwe the play has been adapted to suit a South African environment, from a council housing estate in south London to the third floor landing of an unassuming block of flats in a less affluent suburb of Cape Town.
The characters are victims of their circumstances. Awakening sexual relationships, the daily challenge of living and working in a rough enviro...
Beautiful Thing is the first production of the year at the Milnerton Playhouse. Written by Jonathan Harvey and directed by Johann van der Merwe the play has been adapted to suit a South African environment, from a council housing estate in south London to the third floor landing of an unassuming block of flats in a less affluent suburb of Cape Town.
The characters are victims of their circumstances. Awakening sexual relationships, the daily challenge of living and working in a rough environment contribute to a production where the audience almost gets the sense of viewing reality television. However hapless these characters there is an overriding pathos that that offers the audience many light moments and the dialogue is scattered with laugh lines.
Sandra (Colleen Lorusso) struggles to make a living as a single parent to Jamie (Sean Robinson). A barmaid by profession Sandra is spunky, sexy and slightly sluttish. She struggles to keep a man in her life and her current beau, Tony, (Emanuel Ferreira) is 13 years younger than her and is also a loser. He sees himself as quite a stud but in spite of his rough exterior, he demonstrates surprising insight and sympathy at times. He likes to tan in his speedo, and believes that all chicks find him irresistible
Jamie, Sandra's nerdy son, has awakening sexual feelings for the physically abused next door neighbours' son Ste (Ryan Bird) who is a handsome all-round sportsman and also still at school. He has lots of built-up anger and frustration and often seeks refuge in Sandra's flat when he is being abused by his father and brother.
To further complicate issues, Ste has another admirer: the third flat occupant on this landing, Leah, (Ilze van Dorp) who has a drug problem and is obsessed with the late Amy Winehouse. Slightly older than the boys for her any man will do, which also includes Tony! Leah lives with her useless mother - who we never see and whose front door opens onto this landing.