Lungs (play)

Summary

Lungs is a play written by Duncan Macmillan, which debuted in 2011 at the Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C.

Synopsis edit

M and W, a young couple, find themselves examining the scope of their lives together and the world around them when they begin considering starting a family.

Production history edit

Lungs premiered in October 2011 at the Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C., directed by Aaron Posner and starring Ryan King and Brooke Bloom as M and W respectively.[1] It also held its British debut that same month at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield directed by Richard Wilson, and starring Alistair Cope and Kate O'Flynn.[2]

Canadian productions of the play were held at the Tarragon Theatre in Toronto in March 2014 starring Brendan Gall and Lesley Faulkner, and in February 2015 at the Verb Theatre, starring Kyle Jespersen and Anna Cummer.[3][4]

A 2019 production of the play was hosted at The Old Vic starring Matt Smith and Claire Foy, with Matthew Warchus directing. Previews began in October prior to a November opening.[5][6] This production was planned to transfer to the United States at the Brooklyn Academy of Music from 25 March – 19 April 2020. Smith and Foy were slated to reprise their roles.[7] Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, this transfer was cancelled.[8]

On 27 May 2020, it was announced that the 2019 Old Vic production would be reprised with Matt Smith and Claire Foy starring once again.[9] Starting in June, it was part of Old Vic: In Camera, a project aiming to revive the theatre's revenue, which had been wiped out by the closure of theatres caused by the COVID-19 Pandemic, through live streams and other digital focused works.[10] Despite being live-streamed over the internet, tickets were limited to 1,000 per performance, representing the full capacity of the house of any regular performance at The Old Vic. Tickets were available at standard prices (£10-£65) for each performance.[11]

Critical reception edit

A 2011 review in The Washingtonian praised the play as "original and striking", but slighted the characters as "cliche".[12] In her review for The Guardian, Lyn Gardner wrote "Duncan Macmillan's distinctive, off-kilter love story is brutally honest, funny, edgy and current. It gives voice to a generation for whom uncertainty is a way of life through two flawed, but deeply human, people who you don't always like but start to feel you might love. It's bravely written, startlingly structured, and if it loses momentum in the final 30 minutes, Richard Wilson's sharp staging and two outstanding performers, Alistair Cope and Kate O'Flynn, keep it buzzing to the end."[13]

A review in The Guardian by Arifa Akbar of the 2019 performances at The Old Vic starring Matt Smith and Claire Foy, praised the production's leads and set design.[14]

Awards and nominations edit

The play won the 2013 Best New Play award at the Off West End Awards.[15]

Claire Foy won Best Actress at the 2020 WhatsOnStage Awards for her performance as W in the 2019 Old Vic production.[16]

References edit

  1. ^ Lungs, Studio Theatre
  2. ^ BWW Reviews: Lungs – Crucible Studio, Sheffield, 21 October 2011, BroadwayWorld
  3. ^ Lungs a breath of fresh air at Tarragon Theatre: review
  4. ^ Lungs
  5. ^ The Crown’s Claire Foy and Matt Smith to reunite in Lungs at the Old Vic
  6. ^ Old Vic Sets Dates for Lungs, Starring The Crown's Claire Foy and Matt Smith
  7. ^ ‘The Crown’s Claire Foy, Matt Smith Set U.S. Stage Debuts In New York ‘Lungs’
  8. ^ "Lungs". BAM.org. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  9. ^ "Claire Foy and Matt Smith to reprise their roles in Lungs in empty Old Vic". Sky News. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  10. ^ "LUNGS: in Camera – Coming Soon". The Old Vic. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  11. ^ "Matt Smith and Claire Foy are doing a socially distanced live staging of 'Lungs' at the Old Vic". Time Out London. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  12. ^ Theater Review: "Lungs" at Studio Theatre
  13. ^ Lungs – review
  14. ^ Akbar, Arifa (20 October 2019). "Lungs review – Claire Foy and Matt Smith shine in climate crisis drama". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  15. ^ Love, Catherine (23 September 2014). "Duncan Macmillan: theatre at its best is an intervention". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
  16. ^ 20th Annual WhatsOnStage Awards winners include Andrew Scott, Claire Foy, Come From Away and Six