Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Bette Davis and Joan Crawford
Bette and Joan in conversation
Bette and Joan behind bars
Reviews

Bette And Joan Review

Mar 7, 2024
-
Posted by Roz Scott

Bette And Joan charts the relationship between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford while they make the 1962 film Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?. The film is a psychological thriller about a bitter, lifelong rivalry between two sisters, both actors. This play is set in their Hollywood dressing rooms in the 60s, while they are shooting the film, and is an intensely personal look into the hidden lives of the two stars. Both women are now in their fifties and suffice it to say, they are not best friends.

Emmie Spencer gives a masterful performance as Bette Davis and it’s excellent to see her in a leading role. She has real presence: she is a seasoned actor in the Brighton Little Theatre company and starred humorously as the nurse in Shakespeare In Love. In Bette And Joan she is always in command, only speaks when necessary, has the best lines, is occasionally acerbic and seems hard pressed on every side. Bette often plays strong women, sometimes villains, and chooses her friends very carefully.

Bridget Ane Lawrence, educated in Chicago and New York, gives a compelling performance as the beautiful and, at times, hysterical Joan Crawford. Both Lawrence and Spencer often perform at the New Venture Theatre in Brighton.

Joan is proud of her appearance and lacks the strong, core stability of Bette Davis. If Bette Davis resembles a contemporary Adele, strong, private and uncompromising, Joan Crawford is highly-strung: a pleaser, more akin to a brunette Marilyn Monroe with slightly less talent.

In the first half, Bette Davis has the upper hand. Joan Crawford’s strength becomes more apparent after the interval, revealing a metal beneath her fragile presentation. The mood becomes more reflective, both stars looking back on men they have loved and lost, not least Clark Gable. There is a sense that loneliness is the price of fame for these pre-eminent women.

Direction by Ann Atkins is excellent, as are the costumes put together by a team of three including Glenys Stuart. Steven Adams designed the set in detail which represents an intimate look inside Hollywood.

Anton Burge wrote the script and it’s littered with references to Bette and Joan’s shows. We would have liked to see more of a resolution at the end and more context about how the film was received. Burge specialises in writing about famous women. He directed Mrs. Pat starring Dame Penelope Keith at Chichester Festival Theatre. In 2011, Bette And Joan opened in the West End starring Greta Scacchi and Anita Dobson.

We recommend this play and the audience loved it – it may be set in the 60s, but the themes of friendship, rivalry, aging, love and loss are timeless.

Brighton Little Theatre, Tuesday 5th to Saturday 9th March 2024
Photos by Miles Davies Photography

Mar 7, 2024
Email
Roz Scott
When not reviewing plays, you can find Roz out and about chasing stories as a journalist or tutoring English literature. You can subscribe to her blog at www.rozscott.com. If not, she will be snuggling with her cat and reading the paper. Get in touch if you have a story for Roz.
← PREVIOUS POST
Nouvelle Vague Review
NEXT POST →
Drop The Dead Donkey: The Reawakening! Review
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Death Comes to Pemberley Review
    Sep 3, 2025

    Set six years after the marriage of Elizabeth to Mr Darcy, a murder on their estate takes this story into thriller territory.

  • Betty Boo, Sunday 23rd November
    Sep 1, 2025

    The legendary Betty Boo is going on her first ever solo UK tour and you can catch her at The Green Door Store in November.

  • Mutations Festival 2025 Line Up Announcement
    Aug 28, 2025

    FORM are treating us to a Bonfire Weekend full of warm goodness, bangers and fireworks!

  • Pride And Prejudice Review
    Aug 27, 2025

    A beautifully realised adaptation of one of Jane Austen’s best loved books: giving us a grounded, real and hilarious retelling in perfect balance.

  • Suddenly Last Summer Preview
    Aug 26, 2025

    A stunning version of a lesser known Tennessee Williams play, by the brilliant Conor Baum Company. Don’t miss it.

  • Band Of Holy Joy, Sunday 26th October
    Aug 14, 2025

    The mighty Band Of Holy Joy return to Brighton for a rare matinee show. With support from Asbo Derek.

  • Short Plays 2025 at New Venture Theatre Review
    Aug 1, 2025

    An intriguing evening of short plays as different from each other as apples, text books, motorways, a haircut and moonrock.

  • Matthew Bourne’s The Midnight Bell Review
    Jul 30, 2025

    A stunning, must see show, where the most talented dancers convey the most fascinating and gripping stories of love, connections and betrayals in and around London in the 1930s.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Bette And Joan Review - Brighton Source