Writing: Federer vs. Murray
Reviews for Federer versus Murray, 2011:
    FRINGE REVIEW ****
“A  profoundly moving and genuinely funny meditation on grief and loss as Flo and  Jimmy, a couple in late middle age find themselves both united and divided in  mourning: “Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf” transferred to a Scots sitting  room…Federer versus Murray is a truly joyous, tearful and thought-provoking  piece of work and I urge you to see it while you can.”
 
  THE LIST ****
  “…  this is work that addresses the consequences of forms of western financial  terrorism which have far more powerful effects on ordinary life than bombs or  hijacked aircraft, and this (naturalistic) ordinariness of its characters’ pain  is what brings all the power and earthy humour to the piece.  Both performers work tirelessly and to great  effect with the material, which renders intelligible the vast global forces  that effect tiny individuals in a manner more telling than any amount of  postmodern ‘play’.”
THE INDEPENDENT
  “Gerda  Stevenson… has written a taut and punchy one-hour play about marriage,  nationalism, and saxophone playing. The couple have lost their son, killed in  action in Afghanistan. Their front room is a new war zone….It's a tragic  situation, and Dave Anderson and Stevenson play it with stealth and restraint.”
FEST MAG **** 
    “Federer Versus Murray is a  brilliantly powerful, evocative, humane and funny exploration of loss, grief  and isolation within the confines of domestic family life. It's a beautiful  study of both human fragility and strength, told through the lives two very  unextraordinary people and featuring great performances from leads Gerda  Stevenson (also the playwright) and Dave Anderson.” 
TV BOMB ****
  “…Federer  Versus Murray is set in the home of tennis-fanatic Jimmy and his over-worked,  over-tired wife  Flo … it grasps at  honesty and isn’t over-emotional. Scenes are punctuated by a saxophonist, whose  melancholic melodies give a sense of nostalgia throughout…Stevenson has cracked  the balance between the characters’ complex need to preserve the past, and  their innately Scottish streak that encourages them to get ‘oan wae’ it. The  play invites debate on the causes and futility of war, without preaching. It’s  engaging, entertaining and thoroughly enjoyable...”
WHAT’S ON STAGE
  “Gerda  Stevenson plays Flo, a worn down hospital nurse, in her own powerful short play  about a marriage under strain…Stevenson cleverly mixes her points about  nationalism and domestic misery with a tragic undertow. The couple have lost  their only son in the Afghanistan war, and he haunts them still, paying his  dad’s saxophone…funny, touching, neatly directed by Stevenson.” 
THE SCOTSMAN
  “…Dave  Anderson is superb as Jimmy, a man trying to look on redundancy as a new  opportunity, while Stevenson (Flo) is a tightly coiled spring of grief and  resentment. 
    Stevenson's  play is an admirable attempt to put ordinary Scots' lives on stage in the  context of the wider world…”  
EdinburghGuide.com **** 
    This is a tightly written and  well observed piece whose dialogue shows the dynamics in a long term marriage  where the love seems to have got forgotten as each is locked in their own  polarized world, full of crossed wires. We see a kindly man and a raging  wife hopelessly locked together, not exactly on Mars and Venus, just in a kind  of hell where the Scots expression ‘bombed oot’, used by Jimmy, is especially  apt.
    Their world views are in  opposition too as they argue with raw emotion over the reasons for their son’s  being in Afghanistan and his terrible death. Jimmy sees ‘hope as an opiate’ and  his methods of trying to move on are at odds with Flo’s coping mechanism of  nursing her grief. They can’t even support the same country at Wimbledon with  Jimmy idolizing Roger Federer and Flo patriotically willing Andy Murray to win.
    You can feel the desolation of  the flickering TV screen with Jimmy lying about in his jammies as he deals with  reality of the joyless despair and war zone his marriage has become. 
    The play is poignantly punctuated  by the lovely rounded tones of the saxophone and Chris Hardie appearing in  combats, and playing it in a ghostly light as he appeared from behind the  audience was extraordinarily moving. With Scottish stage veterans Gerda  Stevenson and Dave Anderson being on fine form even after a long Fringe run, it  is game, set and match to the team for this accomplishment.
NRC Handelsblad, August 2011 (Netherlands)
Edinburgh offers an  overwhelming variety of comedy, drama, pop music and theatre events
    At the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh the comedians showcase  their own disasters to make us feel better, but for a critical approach you  need the theatre
By our editor Ron Rijghard
EDINBURGH. You can't walk three metres without a having a flyer pressed into your hand. Even in the gents toilet at the Assembly Theatre there's a sign saying "No flyers’. The art of seducing the public is an attraction in itself. On the High Street there are as many artists handing out leaflets as passers-by taking them. All for the sake of attracting attention: there is a pillory where you can have your photo taken, there are Romans, knights and human refrigerators, and the a capella groups bravely keep on singing through the latest pelting rain shower. Because it's always raining in Edinburgh.
The performers have to throw themselves at the public, as the competition is immense. The Fringe, the big alternative festival, offers a bewildering array of 2,500 events over four weeks, with more than 40 000 performances for a million visitors in over 250 venues ranging from stuffy cellars and containers to cramped attics and college halls.
The biggest slice is comedy, but there is also pop music and theatre. The regular Edinburgh Festival primarily offers classical music and opera. Then there is a renowned Book Festival and an Art Festival. The festivals do for Edinburgh what the princess does for the frog. The grey city turns soft, alive and warm. And everyone is in a hurry: seeing seven or eight shows per day is not unusual. That's possible because no show is allowed to last longer than an hour.
There are scarcely any real stars at the Fringe: John Malkovich is directing a play and Ruby Wax is talking about her depression – dreary and very autobiographical. Stars are unpopular with colleagues because they take the attention away from all the artists who often invest a lot of money in this chance to make their names – and earn next to nothing. As comedian Dave Gorman wrote in The Independent: "Many comics in Edinburgh take on debts that would scare Greece."
What's disappointing is that all these comedians with their artful improvisations have little or nothing to say about the recent riots. Only Jason Cook had an anecdote about the difference between his concern for his brother living in London and his brother's glee. His brother had filmed the police in his garden and cheerfully shouted ‘I've already got three thousand hits on YouTube!’
But the critical approach can be found where it has always flourished: on the stage. The play Federer versus Murray is a Virginia Woolf for the Scottish working class. The long-standing couple Flo and James have slept apart since their son Joe was killed in Afghanistan three years ago. They have never spoken of his death. The dam bursts during the tennis match of the title as author Gerda Stevenson skilfully weaves the pros and cons of war into their verbal battle. James feels that his son died for nothing, for the greed of the Western countries that legitimise the heroin influx by making deals with local warlords. Flo still believes in the moral justification of the war and hopes his death is part of something good. ‘Hope’s a drug, Flo’, he tells her. ‘An addiction. All it does is make ye sleep-walk.’
 
  