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Enquirer – review Enquirer – review
(40 minutes later)
The story about Bryan Ferry dying in mysterious circumstances in the Guardian offices is just someone's work-related anxiety dream. But everything else in this bittersweet elegy to the newspaper industry has the ring of truth, straight from the editorial floor.The story about Bryan Ferry dying in mysterious circumstances in the Guardian offices is just someone's work-related anxiety dream. But everything else in this bittersweet elegy to the newspaper industry has the ring of truth, straight from the editorial floor.
An up-to-the-minute verbatim collage by the National Theatre of Scotland, Enquirer deals not only with the kind of murky material currently being raked over by Lord Justice Leveson, but with all aspects of the journalistic trade, from the disreputable to the noble. An up-to-the-minute, verbatim collage by the National Theatre of Scotland, Enquirer deals not only with the kind of murky material currently being raked over by Lord Justice Leveson, but with all aspects of the journalistic trade, from the disreputable to the noble. Performed between filing cabinets, boardroom tables and newspaper bundles in an office in Glasgow's self-styled "digital media quarter", the production, directed by John Tiffany and Vicky Featherstone, is based on interviews with 43 journalists, mostly anonymous. Some are presented straight, with the cast of six playing clearly identifiable roles, others stitched together into short, dramatic scenarios.
Performed between filing cabinets, boardroom tables and newspaper bundles in an office in Glasgow's self-styled "digital media quarter", the production, directed by John Tiffany and Vicky Featherstone, is based on interviews with 43 journalists (mostly anonymous) some presented straight, with the cast of six playing clearly identifiable roles, others stitched together into short dramatic scenarios. The phone-hacking scandal may be the motivation for staging the piece, but the wider point is to examine an industry driven by a "massive suspicion of power" (to quote one witness) just as much as one that has lost its "moral fucking compass" (to quote another). The phone-hacking scandal may be the motivation for staging the piece, but the wider point is to examine an industry driven by a "massive suspicion of power" (to quote one witness) just as much as one that has lost its "moral fucking compass" (to quote another).
Nor does the show pull its punches. One of a handful of identified interviewees, the veteran hack Jack Irvine (played by Billy Riddoch) is alarmingly unguarded about his time as launch editor of the Scottish Sun. "I had a black book of cash payoffs," he says, adding that payments were made to ambulance crews, social workers and royal staff. "Is it illegal to pay cops?" he asks, seemingly in all innocence. Nor does the show pull its punches. One of a handful of identified interviewees, the veteran Jack Irvine (played by Billy Riddoch), is alarmingly unguarded about his time as launch editor of the Scottish Sun. "I had a black book of cash payoffs," he says, adding that payments were made to ambulance crews, social workers and royal staff. "Is it illegal to pay cops?" he asks, seemingly in all innocence.
Elsewhere, John Bett plays Roger Alton, executive editor of the Times and the former editor of the Observer, being cross-examined by an actor playing the Guardian's Deborah Orr, who conducted the original interviews along with Ruth Wishart and Paul Flynn. Giving a masterclass in evasion, Alton rebuffs the charge of industry hypocrisy over press intrusion: "As far as I know, no newspaper editor has ever had an affair." Elsewhere, John Bett plays Roger Alton, executive editor of the Times and former editor of the Observer, being cross-examined by an actor playing the Guardian's Deborah Orr, who conducted the original interviews along with Ruth Wishart and Paul Flynn. Giving a masterclass in evasion, Alton rebuffs the charge of industry hypocrisy over press intrusion: "As far as I know, no newspaper editor has ever had an affair."
There are anecdotes, too, about racism, befriending targets on Facebook and wayward behaviour such as the senior editor who returned from lunch to ask the entire newsroom: "Can you smell my cunt?" Juxtaposed with such unanchored morality, however, we get Maureen Beattie giving a moving performance as the writer Ros Wynne-Jones, whose Sudan campaign raised £1m from Express readers. We hear of the importance of newspapers to local communities, the value of holding the powerful to account and the commitment to decent values shared by the majority of journalists. There are anecdotes, too, about racism, befriending targets on Facebook and wayward behaviour such as the senior editor who returned from lunch to ask the entire newsroom: "Can you smell my cunt?"
Juxtaposed with such unanchored morality, however, we get Maureen Beattie giving a moving performance as the writer Ros Wynne-Jones, whose Sudan campaign raised £1m from Express readers. We hear of the importance of newspapers to local communities, the value of holding the powerful to account, and the commitment to decent values shared by the majority of journalists.
The result is a yearning sense of an unruly yet sometimes lovable beast, threatened less by Leveson than by the internet. The mood of Enquirer is one of regret rather than indignation, a plangent evocation of the end of an era.The result is a yearning sense of an unruly yet sometimes lovable beast, threatened less by Leveson than by the internet. The mood of Enquirer is one of regret rather than indignation, a plangent evocation of the end of an era.
Enquirer runs until 12 May. Box office: 0141 429 0022 or nationaltheatrescotland.comEnquirer runs until 12 May. Box office: 0141 429 0022 or nationaltheatrescotland.com