The Playboy of the Western World by John Millington Synge.
Directed by Caitriona McLaughlin.
Set and costume design by Katie Davenport. Lighting by James Farncombe. Sound
Designer Adrienne Quartley. Composer Anna Mullarkey. Movement director. Sue
Mythen. Starring Nicola Coughlin, Siobhan McSweeney, Eanna Hardwicke. Lyttleton
Theatre. National Theatre of Britain. NT Live. Dendy Cinema. Until July 1 2026
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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| The cast of NT Live's The Playboy of the Western World |
Two striking thoughts occurred to me as I watched NT Live’s screening of the National Theatre’s production of John Millington Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World. One, that I wished I was watching this powerful staging of Synge’s classic live and two, thank goodness for NT Live that enables audiences thousands of miles away to become immersed in such outstanding theatre. In the comfort of intimate Cinema 6 at Dendy in Canberra, Catriona McLaughlan’s authentic and evocative production of The Playboy of the Western World loses some of the impact and visceral response of sharing a live performance with a theatre full of audience riveted by the production and the performances of an amazing cast under McLaughlan’s direction. It loses none of the drama and the lyrical power of Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World.
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| Nicola Coughlin as Pegeen Flaherty |
In 1907 when was first performed in Dublin’s famous Abbey Theatre, Ireland was experiencing a literary revival. However, today it is difficult to understand why the Abbey performance should have provoked riots by people who felt that it portrayed immorality and cast a slight against Irish patriotism. In 2026 the plot, so skillfully woven by Synge with drama, suspense and surprise appears far less outrageous, rather a revealing depiction of Irish cultural and social life in a rural village in Ireland. Today it reveals the vacillating inconsistency of the human condition, set against a background of parochial isolation and human frailty. The plot, at times seemingly implausible is a reminder of humanity’s predilection to impulse without reason and the need for love and belonging.
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| Éanna Hardwicke as Christy Mahon |
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| Shawn Keogh (Marty Rea) and Widow Quin (Siobhan McSweeney |
Synge constructs a relatively simple plot. The play is set in a tavern owned by Michael Flaherty (Lorcan Cranitch) and run by his barmaid daughter Pegeen Flaherty (Nicola Coughlan ) in a small rural village on Ireland’s west coast. Also at the tavern are Pegeen’s hopeful betrothed Shawn Keogh (Marty Rea ), and farmers, Philly Cullen (Matthew Forrest) and Jimmy Farrel (Naoise Dunbar). Christy Mahon (Eanna Hardwicke) enters seeking refuge and claiming to be fleeing the police after he had killed his father. Much to Shawn’s distress, Pegeen and Christy fall in love and Shawn entreats Widow Quin (Sioban McSweeney) to seduce Mahon away from Pegeen. Old Mahon (Declan Conlon) arrives with a bleeding scalp, but alive and seeks his son. Widow Quin sends him on a wild goose chase and Mahon becomes a hero when he wins a mule race on the slowest horse, much to the amazement of the villagers and the women who hail him as their hero. Things take a rather implausible turn for the worse when Old Mahon reappears, is chased into the fields by Christy and struck again. The village then turns against Christy for murdering his father and attempt to lynch him, urged on by the disillusioned Pegeen. In yet another melodramatic turn of events, Old Mahon reappears, more battered than before but surprisingly alive and he and Christy depart with a parting comment by Christy to Pegeen that he will continue to search out new villages to become their hero. A distraught Pegeen sinks to the floor with a heart wrenching wail, “I have lost my Playboy of the Western World” as the curtain falls.
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| Eanna Hardwicke (Christy Mahon) and Nicola Coughlin (Pegeen Flaherty |
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| Lorcan Cranitch as Michael Flaherty |
It is the authenticity of the National Theatre’s revival of Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World that is so impressive. It may take a short time to tune in to the lyrical rhythm and accents of Synge’s text and the actors’ Irish dialect, but Synge’s power as a dramatist, forging a new tradition and his affection for and understanding of the Irish folk and the excellent performances by the cast in a production that will capture your imagination and rekindle passion for a play that inspired a theatrical revolution. NT Live’s screening of the National Theatre’s production of The Playboy of the Western World is a gift not to be missed.
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