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Just Call Me God: A Dictator’s Final Speech, Symphony Hall, Birmingham, review: A showcase for John Malkovich's skewed method-acting

John Malkovich as a dictator in 'Just Call Me God: A Dictator's Final Speech'
John Malkovich as a dictator in 'Just Call Me God: A Dictator's Final Speech'

From serial killer, via serial seducer, to psychotic ruler: John Malkovich takes no prisoners in his theatre projects and Just Call Me God is no exception. This third collaboration with author Michael Sturminger and musician Martin Haselböck charts the last hour of a dictator’s life, in the company of a TV interviewer and organist Reverend as he gives his sardonic final speech, engages in game-playing (and foreplay) with the journalist then enacts a sudden role reversal.

Seen against live video imagery and Haselböck’s crazed medley of classical and improvised pieces (abetted by Franz Danksagmüller’s distorted electronics), the outcome is a showcase for the hubris, confiding intimacy and skewed method-acting which has ensured Malkovich’s inimitable presence on stage and screen. Problem is this drama provides little insight into the likely thinking of a dictator; predicating gesture and parody over any more cohesive critique.

It hardly helped that Sophie von Kassel’s journalist seemed so stereotyped in her responses, or that aspects of the dialogue were submerged by the organ in Symphony Hall’s resonant acoustic; less of an issue when the production transfers to London’s Union Chapel. Whether any greater depths of character or incident are uncovered is another matter.