Synopsis
Tea Party & The Basement
Published by Dramatists Play Service
7 Male 5 Female
And leaving the answers, almost but never quite offered, to tantalize and intrigue
A long-run Off-Broadway success (on a double bill with The Basement), this fascinating and theatrically masterful play offers Pinter at his best and most oddly menacing in its subtle portrayal of a man whose life is mysteriously coming apart at the seams
".. exquisitely exciting" ~ NY Times
" extremely funny, continuously mischievous and sinister" ~ The New Yorker
" formal playwriting at its most perfect" ~ Women's Wear Daily
The Basement ~ The play is "about a fussy, spinsterish bachelor whose carefully furnished basement flat is invaded late one night by his former roommate with a young girl in tow. Host is effusive in his welcome to former roommate, that is
Girl and former roommate strip naked and get into bed, as host, terribly rattled, continues to chatter. (The chatter is absolutely fine.) The intruders move in permanently, and soon the host's old pictures and bits of sculpture are replaced by a huge, bright, modern abstract
And there are other innovations. As the action progresses, the roles of lover and leftover switch back and forth, and the girl, like the old bum in The Caretaker, tries to set the men against each other and succeeds
There are scenes at a beach, in a cafe, and at a bogus deathbed, and there is a duel, which is fought on a dark stage with lighted broken bottles" ~ Edith Oliver
In the end we are, it seems, back where we started. But not quite. We have seen, if only for a moment, the rather pathetic, trembling animals who lie beneath the veneer of the shaved, powdered exteriors, and we know that it is not relief that will come to them - just continuation
A successful Off-Broadway production (in tandem with Tea Party), which offers a uniquely Pinteresque combination of bizarre humor and silken violence as it details a series of startling reversals on the eternal triangle theme
" the single, most stimulating playwright in the English-speaking theatre today" ~ Newsday
" exquisite theatre" ~ Women's Wear Daily
" fascinating to the point of audience hypnosis" ~ The New Yorker