First Nighter: London Hosting Terence Rattigan's "The Deep Blue Sea," Alexi Kaye Campbell's "Sunset at Villa Thalia" and Arthur Miller's Previously Unproduced "No Villains"

London–It was 1956 and the Royal Court’s production of John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger that turned Terence Rattigan, the leading local playwright of the previous few decades, into a captain of the old guard.

How gallant of the pertinent critics to jettison everything that had gone before–not unlike what happened in the art world when abstract expressionism unceremoniously shunted representational artists aside.

What usually occurs after such rude treatment, though, is that cooler heads eventually prevail and baby-with-the-bathwater-victim Rattigan has been reassessed and welcomed back on stages to prove once again his dramaturgical expertise.

The current example is The Deep Blue Sea, which is enjoying a superb rediscovery. (Karel Reisz did mount one maybe 20 years ago.) The star is Helen McCrory, who’s giving the peak performance of her notable career as philandering wife Hester Collyer–and this is a Hester who deserves a big “A” on her frock front.

Found nearly dead of a surfeit of aspirins and gas in a downscale London neighborhood, she recovers her life but not her spirit after boyfriend Freddie Page (Tom Burke) forgot her birthday. He’s an ex-test pilot and a seemingly full-blown cad for whom she left her husband William Collyer (Peter Sullivan), a revered judge, 10 months earlier.

The Deep Blue Sea–Helen believes she’s caught between the devil and the deep…–follows the lost soul over the next 18 or so hours as landlady Mrs. Elton (Marion Bailey), neighbors Philip and Ann Welch (Hubert Burton, Yolanda Kettle) and Mr. Miller (Nick Fletcher), a doctor no longer practicing after having been involved in a scandal (possibly homosexual), attempt to come to her aid.

So does abandoned husband William, but Hester will have none of it. She’s too wrapped up in Freddie, too desperate to make him stay with her in what’s essentially the character study of a woman in love but painfully aware that love is a complex state of affairs that frequently don’t jibe.

It could be said that though director Carrie Cracknell, lighting designer Guy Hoare and sound designer Peter Rice apply flourishes to disguise the only slightly creaky situation, it remains–but doesn’t really matter. It could also be said that the huge flat that set designer Tom Scutt fills the wide Lyttelton stage with hardly suggests the shabbiness in which Hester has chosen to live in sin with Freddie.

By the way, Freddie is the real irony here. A hero during World War II, he’s now a society discard and incensed about it. That’s right. He may be the original angry young man, a true precursor to Osborne’s Jimmy Porter. And to think no one at the time Rattigan was being shown the door noticed he’d foreshadowed Osborne.
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A New York City-born friend of mine who’s lived here for some time and goes regularly to the theater claims he’s hard put to name a single play written by an English playwright that contains a sympathetic American character.

I tend to agree and can now add that one of the ugliest Americans ever to appear in a play premiering here is spreading his bad odor in Sunset at Villa Thalia at the National’s Dorfman. It’s the work of Alexi Kaye Campbell, the son of a Greek father and British Mother.

The hateful American is Harvey (Ben Miles), who works for the American government (read CIA) and is clearly involved in various Chilean and Greek regime changes carried out in the 1960s to stop any suspected infiltration of Communism

As Campbell’s indictment gets underway–and I’m not claiming it’s specious to the core–Harvey and blond wife June (Elizabeth McGovern, proving there’s life after Downton Abbey) are dining with English playwright Theo (Sam Crane) and his actress wife Charlotte (Pippa Nixon) at the Greek villa the latter couple has rented for the summer.

Pippa seems reluctant about their having extended the invitation. Theo is less disturbed about the dinner for four and becomes less so when Harvey, casing the joint, suggests that the vacationing couple would likely be able to purchase the beautifully positioned home at rock-bottom cost. That’s given the status of the country’s economy–about which Harvey may have inside info.

Before the first act, set in 1967, ends, a few other facts emerge, including Harvey’s attraction to Charlotte (and possibly hers to him). He likes a change from the well-meaning but dim-bulbed June. There’s also Harvey’s insisting he’s falling in love with Theo, platonically, of course. One fact the audience may dispute is Harvey’s claim that he’s a good man who’s been entangled in international upheavals he greatly regrets.

As act two starts, it’s 1974 and again Harvey and June are stopping at the villa Theo and Charlotte have owned for seven years and share with children Adrian (either Thomas Berry, Billy Marlow or Ethan Rouse) and Rosalind (either Sophia Ally, Dixie Egerickx or Scarlett Nunes). Though Harvey and Theo are still pals (Campbell never satisfactorily explains the extent of their relationship), Charlotte is even more troubled about Harvey’s past and then even more so when June unburdens herself of her fear of, and for, him.

Directed well by Simon Godwin (Hildegard Bechtler designed the coveted villa with two-level patio), Campbell’s achievement is writing three-dimensional figures, whose individual psyches and the conflicts caused when they clash are utterly credible. By the denouement, there’s even reason to muster a modicum of sympathy for the dreaded Harvey, certainly as Miles fleshes him out.
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Does the title No Villains mean anything to you? It didn’t to me either, but it means plenty now. It’s a one-act play that Arthur Miller wrote when, at 20, he was still a University of Michigan student and looking to win a playwriting prize that would have fetched him Depression money he desperately needed.

Though he has acknowledged it’s the most autobiographical play he ever wrote–about a once-lucrative family business failing during a strike–it has never been produced until now.

Thanks to director Sean Turner, who learned of its existence and tracked it down, it’s just moved from Islington’s Old Red Lion Theatre to Trafalgar Studios 2. Slightly fewer thanks go to Turner for how he’s handled the drama, which in any case has Miller’s themes and touches throughout. Everything that motivated him to write about moral conflict and familial discontent is foreshadowed in the 80-minute work.

It’s also the most Jewish of any Miller opus. Coat manufacturer Abe Simon (David Bromley) and Esther Simon (Nesba Crenshaw) have two sons, Ben (George Turvey), who joined the business, and Arnold (Alex Forsyth), who’s the Miller stand-in and refuses to help at the factory because of his “Communist ideas” about not crossing a picket line.

There’s no question that this is a volatile time and certainly for the nearly destitute Simons, but Turner has them and those around them, including sister Maxine (Helen Coles) and ailing Grandpa Garnett (Kenneth Jay) behave like rage-aholics on steroids. In time the relentless shouting and jabbing alienates spectators from actors. Nonetheless, the good news is there’s a new Arthur Miller play to add to his important canon.

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Tuesday's Morning Email: Inside Trump's Pitiful War Chest

TOP STORIES

INSIDE TRUMP’S PITIFUL WAR CHEST Donald Trump had just $1.3 million cash on hand in June, compared to Hillary Clinton’s $42 million. Twitter had a field day with #TrumpSoPoor. [Paul Blumenthal, HuffPost

MARK LEIBOVICH: ‘WILL TRUMP SWALLOW THE GOP WHOLE?’“Still, our meetings sometimes took on the feel of therapy sessions, with Priebus playing the role of the betrayed spouse trying to convince me that his tormentor really could change. Trump would soon be ‘pivoting’ into a more ‘presidential’ mode, Priebus kept promising.” [NYT]

BOTH GUN CONTROL MEASURES FAIL TO PASS SENATE Neither could get the 60 votes needed to advance. See the New York Daily News’s controversial cover in response. [Mike McAuliff and Jen Bendery, HuffPost]

TRUMP FIRES CAMPAIGN MANAGER And staff rejoiced. Watch his CNN exit interview if you would like to feel incredibly awkward. [Michelle Fields, HuffPost]

MOTHER OF 11 MOURNED IN ORLANDO Brenda Lee Marquez McCool beat cancer twice and was at Pulse to support her openly gay son. [WaPo]

WHEN YOU’RE REPAIRING JESUS’S TOMB Not your average fixer-upper. [WaPo]

ANOTHER LISTERIA RECALL Watch out for frozen mixed veggies and peas from Bountiful Harvest, First Street, Great Value, Live Smart, Market Pantry and Sprout. [CNN]

For more video news from The Huffington Post, check out this morning’s newsbrief.

WHAT’S BREWING

HOW TO SNAG FREE TICKETS From the aftermath of that Ticketmaster lawsuit. [HuffPost]

‘ELON MUSK IS WRONG’ “We aren’t living in a simulation.” [Motherboard]

HOW KODAK KNEW ABOUT THE ATOMIC BOMB TESTING Some weird things started happening to their photos. [Popular Mechanics]

NETFLIX HAS A SNAZZY NEW LOGO It’s all about the N. [HuffPost]

AFTER THE SURGERY “As much as 40% of patients suffer from depression after cardiac surgery, research shows. And in older patients, psychological and social issues such as isolation and a lack of a strong support network can also limit recovery after the stress of cardiac surgery.” [WSJ | Paywall]

IN DEFENSE OF HANDWRITING We here at The Morning Email still write in cursive, so obviously it should stick around forever. [NYT]

WHAT’S WORKING 

THE DETROIT TEEN WHO WANTS THERE TO BE A SPACE FOR HIS PEERS’ GRIEF “Here in the city of Detroit, we lose someone on a day-to-day basis,” DeAngelo Hughes said. “I created Detroit Flutter, which is an organization where we all as youth can come together and share our stories among each other, find a sense of hope and comfort and find people who are going through the same obstacles we’re going through.” [HuffPost]

For more, sign up for the What’s Working newsletter.

BEFORE YOU GO

~ When smugglers in the West Bank open the door to attackers.

~ You’re not losing it — LaCroix sparkling water is suddenly everywhere.

~ Get excited for the new phone emojis

~ Drumroll please — America’s favorite fast food restaurant is…

~ “I hope Puma does not produce condoms.” 

~ Check out the best (and worst) states to be a kid.

~ In case you thought life was hard for those with private wealth managers, they now even can plan your bachelor party. Unclear if they charge a 2 percent fee on all the events or not.

 

 

Send tips/quips/quotes/stories/photos/events/scoops to Lauren Weber lauren.weber@huffingtonpost.com.

Follow us on Twitter @LaurenWeberHP. Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter?
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EU Set To Extend Sanctions Against Russia Until 2017

BRUSSELS (Reuters) — The European Union’s Brussels envoys agreed on Tuesday to extend until the end of January the energy, financial and defense sanctions on Russia over the conflict in Ukraine, diplomatic sources said.

The bloc’s ministers have yet to formally approve the six-month roll-over but diplomats said there was no doubt they would. France and Britain asked for time to receive comments from their parliaments, though these have no power to block it.

Diplomats said formal ministerial approval had been penciled in for a meeting in Luxembourg on Friday although it could be held over until an EU leaders summit next week, or even later.

After more than two years of sanctions slapped over Moscow’s annexation of Crimea from Kiev and backing for east Ukraine’s rebels, the EU is planning a broader review of its policy vis-à-vis Russia in the second half of this year.

The German foreign minister and the Italian prime minister are among a growing chorus of politicians pushing for sanctions relief. In April, the French parliament approved a non-binding resolution calling for the lifting of EU sanctions.

They say the EU can no longer afford to miss out on trading with Russia and that any sanctions should only be a temporary rather than stay in place for too long if they fail to force a change of policy from the Kremlin.

Poland and the Baltic states are more wary of Russia and say the restrictions must hold until a troubled peace plan for east Ukraine is fully implemented.

More than 9,000 people died in fighting there and rival sides in the conflict must yet withdraw heavy arms from the region, Kiev should organize local elections there and Moscow is bound to help Ukraine regain control of its border with Russia.

The EU needs unanimity to decide on sanctions, some of which were slapped over Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Kiev in March 2014, a move that was not recognized by any country in the world. Russia vows not to give back the Black Sea peninsula.

That leaves diplomats in Berlin and Brussels looking at options for a potential partial or gradual sanctions relief.

European Council President Donald Tusk plans to dedicate an evening working session to the bloc’s policy vis-à-vis Russia and the conflict in Ukraine when he chairs a summit of the 28 EU leaders in October. 

(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska, Alastair Macdonald, additional reporting by Leigh Thomas in Paris; editing by Ralph Boulton)

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John Goodman Wants Donald Trump Supporters To Build Their Own Dome Instead

John Goodman has an idea that might finally satisfy Democrats, Republicans and Donald Trump fans. To defeat Trump’s racist domestic policies, consider this brand-new DOMEstic plan.

While promoting the movie “10 Cloverfield Lane,” Goodman told The Huffington Post that Trump supporters should take inspiration from his character, Howard. In the movie, Howard builds his own bunker to protect himself from what he believes is an oncoming alien invasion. At Goodman’s suggestion, Trump lovers could, and should, do the same.

“Then they wouldn’t be bothered,” said Goodman.

Trump has claimed he will build a giant, “beautiful” wall on the southern border of the United States to keep out illegal immigrants. But this doesn’t go far enough in Goodman’s mind, as fans of Trump aren’t considering the equally important threat of an extraterrestrial invasion.

The actor posited that Trump supporters should “gather themselves into a dome.”

Appearing on “The Howard Stern Show” in March, Goodman was more reluctant to talk in depth about Trump. “I just don’t get it,” he told Stern. “I mean, I can understand it, because he’s a very popular figure from reality television. But, yeah — it’s just, you know, I don’t want any death threats.” 

Make Goodman and America safe again by supporting the dome.

 

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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Miesha Tate Burns Ronda Rousey On 'Conan' To Keep The Feud Hot

This fight feud just can’t be knocked out.

UFC champ Miesha Tate is taking more shots at Ronda Rousey outside  of the ring ahead of a potential third bout.

Tate made clear to Conan O’Brien Monday that she is focusing on her bantamweight title defense against Amanda Nunes on July 9. But she couldn’t resist inflicting a burn to her simmering feud with Rousey.

Rousey, one of the sport’s most popular figures, has not fought since last November after she was defeated in an upset by Holly Holm (who then lost the title to Tate in March.)

“I’ve been defeated before but I’ve come back stronger for it, and I question if she will be able to do the same,” Tate said of Rousey on “Conan.”

“She seems awfully pouty about the loss and it’s like, we’ve all had losses. You either get up back on the horse and come back stronger for it or you sit out for a year.”

Tate has previously dissed Rousey since becoming champ, but her trash-talk with Conan seemed to take it up a notch.

The Tate-Rousey rivalry has stewed for years. It’s been one-sided in the ring, with Rousey winning their two matches by submission. Rousey perhaps escalated the feud after her second win, in late 2013, when she refused to shake Tate’s hand. She said later that Tate only offered her hand because the cameras were rolling.

H/T Uproxx

 

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(VIDEO) OMD's de Nardis Searches For Authenticity At The Cannes Oasis

What should a brand be in 2016? “Authentic.” That’s the watchword everyone is using these days, and Omnicom’s OMD media agency is no different.

As the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity got underway this week, OMD camped out at what it’s calling its “OMD Oasis“, a terrace on the Croisette where it will host more than 20 panel discussions, boardroom discussions, air-conditioned meetings – and Beet.TV’s production center for the week.

Modern agencies are coalescing around the fact that clients can no longer just pump out salesy messages, they have to portray a point of view and an authentic raison d’être, if they want to be appreciated.

“If you Googled ‘brand authenticity’, you’d probably get 15,000, 17,000 articles,which probably means that we don’t yet have the final answer,” OMD Worldwide CEO Mainardo de Nardis says. “What is the magic rule? I don’t know. I don’t think anybody does. That’s why we’re in Cannes.”

OMD’s Oasis will host a discussion on that topic with Gwyneth Paltrow, the actress who is also named as a curator of the weekly lifestyle magazine cum ecommerce site Goop.

It will also host discussions with executives from Twitter, Guardian News & Media, Daily Mail, CNN and others.

 


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Editor’s Note: During Cannes Lions, Beet.TV’s production will be based at the OMD Oasis.  Many thanks to them for their kind hospitality.

You can find this post on Beet.TV.

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Roku Search finally adds news channels to its results

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Epson Pro Cinema projectors support 4K resolution

epson-pro-cinemaEpson has unveiled several new projectors and all of them support 4K resolution to allow users to watch movies in UHD with support for high dynamic range in some models. The first of the new projectors is the Pro Cinema 6040UB and 4040. These two projectors have the same features save the 6040UB meeting ISF Certification standard with independent image … Continue reading

John Oliver's Brexit takedown won't air in the UK until after EU vote

As Britain gears up to vote in the EU referendum later this week, broadcasters are constantly working to ensure their coverage remains impartial. One such company is Sky, which has this week been forced to delay the latest instalment of John Oliver’s…

Computers learn to predict high-fives and hugs

Deep learning systems can already detect objects in a given scene, including people, but they can’t always make sense of what people are doing in that scene. Are they about to get friendly? MIT CSAIL’s researchers might help. They’ve developed a mach…