Article MQW9 F*ck the Polar Bears review – drilling into the climate debate

F*ck the Polar Bears review – drilling into the climate debate

by
Michael Billington
from on (#MQW9)

Bush, London
Tanya Ronder's play probes the clash between corporate career and private conscience via one conflicted family

You can't accuse the British theatre of ignoring climate change: in fact, it was Steve Waters's The Contingency Plan at the old Bush that in 2009 kicked off a spate of plays on the subject. But, much as I applaud the spirit behind Tanya Ronder's new 95-minute piece, it spends too long circling around the big issue before launching into an impassioned moral debate.

The aggressive title clearly refers to people's double standards: Gordon, Ronder's hero, is a top guy in a big energy company who frets about the loss of his daughter's toy polar bear while working on schemes that will wreck the planet's animal life. But Gordon is a bit of a mess all round. At work, he's been offered the post of chief executive with a licence from the government to pursue fracking operations. At home, however, his wife, Serena, bluntly tells him she doesn't like their life, his housepainter brother acts as a rebuke to his conscience and domestic objects mysteriously go haywire. On top of that, the Icelandic au pair turns out to be a militant conservationist.

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