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Review: Tom Sturridge and Jake Gyllenhaal Beautifully Tell of Personal Tragedies in SEA WALL/A LIFE

By: Feb. 15, 2019
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"As terrifying as anything I've seen," is how a young fellow describes the natural phenomenon that gives playwright Simon Stephens' solo piece Sea Wall its title.

Review: Tom Sturridge and Jake Gyllenhaal Beautifully Tell of Personal Tragedies in SEA WALL/A LIFE  Image
Tom Sturridge (Photo: Joan Marcus)

"I thought it was a gradual slope," Alex explains, while describing his first scuba diving experience, unprepared for the sight of how the ocean's floor just suddenly drops down hundreds of feet.

That sudden, terrifying shift is an apt bit of symbolism for the first of two monologues that comprise The Public's beautifully acted double-bill directed by Carrie Cracknell.

Tom Sturridge plays the narrator of Sea Wall, followed by Jake Gyllenhaal as the storyteller of Nick Payne's A LIFE. Both portrayals of a man struck by personal tragedy, and how they handle the grief that follows, are performed directly to the audience in front of the imposing brick wall of designer Laura Jellinek's set.

Sturridge's Alex is already on stage when audience members enter, calming his nerves with a beer and looking through old photographs. Although there's a sincere, innocent boyishness that shines through when he describes the period when he and his wife were preparing for the birth of their daughter, he is a tense young man given to dart about aimlessly, sharply switch gears mid-sentence, or just helplessly stare out.

It was an event occurring during a seaside family holiday as guests of his father-in-law, a retired British military man, that has left him with, as he puts it, a hole running through the center of his stomach.

As played by Gyllenhaal in A LIFE, Abe appears, at least on the surface, to be adjusting better to his loss. He even offers a bit of philosophy on the matter.

Review: Tom Sturridge and Jake Gyllenhaal Beautifully Tell of Personal Tragedies in SEA WALL/A LIFE  Image
Jake Gyllenhaal (Photo: Joan Marcus)

"I remember reading somewhere," he recalls, "or maybe someone telling me about this idea that there are three kinds of deaths. The first is when the body ceases to function. The second is when we bury the body, or I guess set it on fire. And the third is the moment, sometime way in the future, when our names are said, spoken aloud, for the very last time."

Abe may very well to be the one who speaks his father's name for the last time and wonders who will do the same for his daughter, as he alternates descriptions of preparing for his hospital-bound parent's death from heart disease with preparing for his child's birth.

Though taking place years apart, both life-changing experiences force a sharp adjustment from his self-identity as a son to one as a father, converging during periods when both father and daughter are nearly completely dependent on him.

Though A LIFE is less eventful than Sea Wall, it's the more universal of the two. And perhaps a bit comforting as well.

When Abe is looking for a frank answer as to how much his father knows about the seriousness of his condition, he's frustrated by a doctor's vague reply, "We try to operate within a culture of optimism."

And yet, that culture of optimism is just the comfort Payne provides at the end of an emotional theatre-going experience.



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