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It’s unlikely that when Art premiered at the Comedie des Champs-Elysees in Paris in 1994 anyone could have predicted its global popularity.

The West End translation by Christopher Hampton initially featured the heavyweight triumvirate of Albert Finney, Tom Courtenay and Ken Stott and its eight-year run was further populated by a succession of actors and comedians eager to stamp their mark on the play. It’s an understandable attraction as Yasmina Reza’s literate yet economic script has three meaty roles and this revival features all of the original London creative team.

Paul Ritter as Marc and Rufus Sewell as Serge unlock the frustrations of their characters with the efficiency of a well oiled machine. They are believable as friends, but hold enough back to allow their argument to build a crippling crescendo of straight-talk and fisticuffs. It is Tim Key as Yvan however, who steals the show as Yvan, the king of compromise. Key’s physical performance painfully underscores Yvan’s mounting dissatisfaction at this crossroads of his life, trying to please too many people all the time.

Paul Vale, The Stage

Art at the Old Vic