Lobby Hero – Dudley St Productions

From the writer of This Is Our Youth comes a play about NY cops, ethics and romance.
Glenn Saunders
Published on July 14, 2014

Overview

Kenneth Lonergan’s Lobby Hero, playing at the Tap Gallery’s intimate upstairs theatre, is a sprawling play about ethics, romance, family and ‘doing the right thing’. If you saw another of Lonergan’s plays, This Is Our Youth, at the Opera House two years ago, you’d know that you’re in safe hands, as this production proves.

Lonergan’s play follows a security guard, Jeff (Tom Oakley), over the course of four consecutive evenings as he works the graveyard shift. His supervisor, William (Dorian Nkono), visits from time to time, struck with a moral dilemma about his brother. Two police officers — Bill (Jeremy Waters) and Dawn (Shari Sebbens) — enter the lobby where Jeff works, bringing another twist or two to Jeff’s moral quandary.

Directed by Kevin Jackson, Lobby Hero takes a while to find its stride. There’s a bravado about it, a slow-building crescendo which eventually reaches breaking point, while underneath we find four people, each facing their own moral problems, each trying to find a way through, aching and breaking.

Hitting its stride late in the first act, the play bristled and sparkled with an energy and warmth, and as it neared its conclusion, despite the inevitable maelstrom of shorting tempers and swaggering bluster, you couldn’t help but want to reach out to Jeff and Dawn and William and try to reassure them that everything would, sooner or later, be alright.

Oakley’s Jeff, essentially an Everyman character, is full of a luckless naivety which we can all empathise with; his scenes with Dawn are excruciatingly awkward at the same time as being honest and charming. Sebbens’ Dawn is not afraid to speak her mind and is determined to do the right thing and see that justice is brought to those who deserve it, but with Jeff we see another, more tender side to her. Nkono’s William is a larger than life character, but underneath his bluster and caricaturey performance is a truthfulness, a portrayal of a man walking the knife’s edge between the right and wrong decision. Jeremy Waters’ Bill is a fiery character; as Dawn’s senior officer he is intimidating and insinuating, but in Waters’ hands, we see the man inside him, see how he is torn by his choices and conscience.

While the production takes a while to find its rhythm, and seems to falter towards the middle of act two, it is a strong show. Played on Christopher Pitcairn’s sparse set, lit simply by Rachel Smith, and with minimal unobtrusive sound design by Pete Neville, this Lobby Hero is one you’ll be cheering for a while yet.

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