Lifeline Theater’s madcap adaptation of British author G.K. Chesterton’s 1908 metaphysical thriller The Man Who Was Thursday, gives us a madcap mix of spy-vs.-spy and Masterpiece Theater who-dun-it.
Ensemble member Bilal Dardai is clearly a lover of this brief novel by Chesterton, a satire on espionage that if adapted to a contemporary setting would read fresh, lively and funny. Chesterton’s Catholic-infused philosophical writing is among staples of college English literature survey courses.
The Man Who Was Thursday follows the tale of a Scotland Yard undercover officer, Gabriel Syme, who infiltrates an anarchist cell intent on blowing up Parliament. In the course of his investigation, he is named the head the anarchist cell, then stumbles upon one embedded agent after another, until, it seems, the anarchist group is being managed entirely by Scotland Yard undercovers – with hilarious results. “I will tell you something else: this is no way to fight anarchists!” barks one of the agents on discovering another.
Director Jess Hutchinson and Dardai have kept the story in its Edwardian timeframe (it’s a remount of a New Leaf Theatre 2009 work) and while the first half dawdles the pace picks up, and the audience was fully enjoying this show – with the theater well filled. It’s a bit like watching a Dungeons and Dragons game enacted, with the characters (anarchists are named for the days of the week, to keep them incognito) taking on personae (a Scotsman, a German intellectual, a French petty nobleman) then discarding them when their identity is found out.
The show rides entertainingly on the exceptional performances of the cast overall, especially Eduardo Xavier Curley-Camillo, who as Gabriel Syme, drives much of the show on his suave and exceptional delivery in a manicured British accent. It’s a fun show we can recommend for an entertaining afternoon or evening.
The Man Who Was Thursday runs through April 7, 2019 at the Lifeline Theater.