Ben Butley is poisonous, spiteful, a bully, a sadist and a snob. So how does Simon Gray, who created his titular anti-hero in 1971, ensure that an audience can endure his company? He equips him with the kind of lacerating verbal dexterity that makes you catch your breath, appalled and a little awed all at once. And in Lindsay Posner’s fine revival, this nasty, sad, desperate piece of work who, as a lecturer in a London university English department, gets plenty of opportunity to inflict his wit on the soft young sensibilities of eager undergraduates, is played with bilious aplomb by Dominic West. You dislike him, often violently; but you can’t tear your eyes away from him.
West is an impressive presence, diabolically gleeful, rueful and helplessly enraged by turns, his glowering expression breaking frequently into a lupine grin. He’s well matched by Martin Hutson as Joseph, who, harried though he is, holds far more of the cards in their vicious game than it at first appears. And the single scene in which Butley confronts Reg, Joseph’s partner played with cool, menacing stillness by Paul McGann (pictured above, with West), is utterly riveting.

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