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Hong Kong production of Closer won’t have film’s ending, as actors talk about the challenges of getting into their roles

Sweet and Sour Productions’ play won’t turn out the same way the 2004 film starring Julia Roberts and Jude Law did, while the four actors talk about dealing with characters bent on deceit, emotional manipulation and betrayal

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Rebecca Leung as Alice the stripper in the Hong Kong production of Closer by Sweet and Sour Productions. Photo: Sweet and Sour Productions

Closer is an award-winning play by British playwright Patrick Marber. It was first performed at the Royal National Theatre in London in 1997, but is probably best known for Mike Nichols’ 2004 film adaptation starring Julia Roberts, Jude Law, Natalie Portman and Clive Owen.

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Although Marber adapted his own play for the screen, Nichols’ film ends differently. For the version to be staged this week by Sweet and Sour Productions at Hong Kong Repertory Theatre’s Black Box venue in Sheung Wan, director Candice Moore says she has stuck to the original script.

“I read the play first and then saw the film,” she recalls. “We did scenes from it at drama school. It was a striking play. I think it’s very well written and it’s quite perceptive about the relationships that you go through at a certain stage in your life.”

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Set in 1990s London at the dawn of widespread access to the internet – an encounter in a sex chat room is pivotal to the plot – Closer is a four-hander exploring the relationships of two troubled couples who swap partners at various stages of the play.

Lust, deceit, emotional manipulation and betrayal are key themes, and although there are some funny lines, it is hard to imagine why London’s Evening Standard had it pegged as a comedy.

“Although it’s more than 20 years since it was written I still think it’s relevant,” Moore says. “We’ve brought it a bit up to date, but it’s quite a minimal play with not that many props, so it’s timeless in a way.”

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Sweet and Sour Productions director Candice Moore. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
Sweet and Sour Productions director Candice Moore. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

Although Moore has directed Rob Archibald – who plays the role of Larry – in previous productions, she is working for the first time with the other three actors.

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