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Neil Brand's play, Seeing It Through
(Radio 3, Sunday), considered the murky relations
between art, politics and war, refracting them through a series of fragile
relationships. Friendships crumbled, political allegiances wobbled, and
once close siblings no longer quite understood one other. It was rich, involving
stuff, adding questions of gender equality — the play began with a
suffragette throwing pig's blood at a politician — to a drama already
busy with the issues of the day.
Set in 1914, the play reassessed the career of liberal politician Charles
Masterman from the time of his appointment to the British War Propaganda
Bureau. Michael Maloney, as Masterman, gave an engrossing portrayal of a
resolutely fair and well-meaning figure left flailing in office as his political
influence shrank. As it did so, his drinking increased, and in Brand's version
of events, he was propped up (quite literally in one tender, funny scene,
where he is marched around the room until he sobers up) by his assistant,
Jean, played vividly by Clare Corbett. That she happened to be the blood-throwing
feminist was a forgivable dramatic convenience in a play that otherwise
dodged the obvious in favour of the thought-provoking.
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