Death of England: Face to Face, review: raw lockdown drama shines light on the politics of identity

What’s in a face? Quite a lot when you are convinced that your mixed-race daughter has similar features to her racist Engerland-braying grandad. “Alan Fletcher, with his twisted lip, on the face of my beautiful child,” says Giles Terera’s Delroy in Death of England: Face to Face, a new National Theatre collaboration with Sky Arts. In his mind’s eye he sees not his newborn but Fletcher’s spittle-flecked mouth snarling at the girl’s mother: “Don’t even think about having a brown kid.”

Face to Face is the latest instalment in Clint Dyer and Roy Williams’s miniaturist state of the nation story cycle Death of England about two working-class friends, Delroy and Michael, which began life at the National last January with a monologue explosively delivered by Rafe Spall as Michael, and continued in November with the eponymous Delroy, performed with equal sinew-straining adrenaline by Michael Balogun. 

Following in the footsteps of the National’s film theatre version of Romeo and Juliet this April, director Dyer has turned the next, possibly concluding chapter into an 80-minute film starring Terera and Neil Maskell. It doesn’t require you to have seen the preceding monologues, but by way of quick scene setting, Michael, who is white, and Delroy, who is black and the semi-estranged boyfriend of Michael’s sister Carly, are both reckoning in different ways with the poisonous legacy of Michael’s late, thuggishly xenophobic dad. 

The first monologue was framed by the tensions of Brexit (Michael voted against; both his beloved dad and Delroy voted for); now, with Black Lives Matter and Covid thrown into the mix, their live wire friendship serves as a sort of living index for the emotional impact of recent history on the lives of young British men.

Face to Face is set over one afternoon during the pandemic in Delroy’s east London flat. New fatherhood, the pressures of lockdown, the reverberations of the George Floyd protests plus a racist altercation earlier that day involving both men all feed into the dramatic mix as a visibly strained Delroy and Michael bat back and forth ideas about inheritance, identity, culpability and belonging, with each turning to the audience to corroborate their respective points of view. 

Related Posts

April 23: church holiday today, who to pray for the health of the military

What church holiday is celebrated on April 23 according to the new and old style, what not to do, who has a name day. What church holiday…

On April 23, Ukrainians will experience strong temperature contrasts (map)

It will be coldest in the west and warmest in the southeast. On April 23 in Ukraine it will be from +11° to +20° / photo Pixabay…

Horoscope for April 23: Cancer – fulfillment of desires, Pisces – a successful day

This day will be the beginning of new achievements for many zodiac signs. Horoscope for April 23 / photo ua.depositphotos.com Astrologers have compiled a horoscope for April…

Horoscope for April 23 according to Tarot cards: Cancer – overcoming fears, Libra – progress

Horoscope for April 23 according to Tarot cards / photo ua.depositphotos.com Esotericists have made their forecasts for April 23, 2024 for all signs of the Zodiac. Find…

Russia has stepped up attacks and IPSO against Kharkov: ISW explained the enemy’s plan

According to analysts, the Russian Federation does not have the forces to capture the city. Russia puts pressure on Kharkov/ photo ua.depositphotos.com The Russian invaders have stepped…

St. George’s Day according to the new calendar: what the saint helps with, what not to do

On the feast of St. George the Victorious, one of the most famous Christian saints is remembered. When is the day of St. George the Victorious and…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *