Glengarry Glen Ross: A First Rate Play About Second Rate Men

Glengarry Glen Ross, Playhouse Theatre ★★★★☆

By Johnny Fox Last edited 77 months ago

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Glengarry Glen Ross: A First Rate Play About Second Rate Men Glengarry Glen Ross, Playhouse Theatre 4
Christian Slater (Ricky Roma) & Stanley Townsend (Shelley Levene) - Glengarry Glen Ross at The Playhouse - (c) Marc Brenner

Is the Playhouse becoming London’s venue of choice for American stars’ vanity projects? Matthew Perry (Chandler from Friends) chose it last year for his self-written piece The End of Longing, and in 2014 Lindsey Lohan showcased her genuine acting chops in another David Mamet work, Speed-the-Plow.

Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Rossnot a tartan bonnet in sight, it’s an All-American play set in Chicago in the 80s — is about ruthless competition between real estate salesmen, paid largely on commission, and ready to cut any throat or corner to come top of the monthly leader board.

Oliver Ryan (Baylen) & Christian Slater (Ricky Roma) - Glengarry Glen Ross at The Playhouse - (c) Marc Brenner

It’s all about ‘big swinging dicks’ and the biggest and swingingest for sure is Christian Slater’s spot-on Ricky Roma, swaggering with confidence and measuring out charm according to the size of the sale. He’s near-perfect in the part, and as in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, seems to relish being the successful American actor in a London cast of Brits faking the accent.

Most of them roll over and let him have the limelight, although Stanley Townsend comes nearest to capturing the tenor and pacing of a Mamet script, particularly in a scene where he pleads with Kris Marshall’s wonderfully flattened office manager to give him better clients, and again sublimely when he’s made his first successful sale in some time.

Christian Slater (Ricky Roma) & Daniel Ryan (Lingk) - Glengarry Glen Ross at The Playhouse - (c) Marc Brenner

This play often gets compared to Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman — but the fact Miller and Mamet won their Pulitzer prizes 35 years apart shows how universal are their themes of ambition, failure and the long-promised collapse of the American Dream. First rate play about second rate men.

Glengarry Glen Ross, by David Mamet. Playhouse Theatre, Northumberland Avenue, WC2. Until 3 February 2018. Tickets £15-125.

Last Updated 17 November 2017