Photography by Catherine Ashmore
The by-now memetic mansplaining refrain of “Actually, it’s Frankenstein’s Monster” unwittingly tells its own meta-fictional tragic tale of how much true understanding of the original novel by Mary Wollstonecraft’s daughter has been lost to the schlock of late-50s Hammer Horror with the passing of years, and how, with it, the voice of Mary Shelley has been stifled, subsumed by a one-note masculine narrative of a mere objectified killer monster on the loose which must be violently destroyed by its male hero creator. There exists a whole host of social and cultural problems with this active sabotage of a woman’s art by what was, and remains, a vastly male industry that has, in essence, stripped her work for parts to profit themselves at market with endless, evermore ridiculous Hollywood sequels getting further and further away from the crucial points being made.
Fortunately, director Danny Boyle’s spectacularly good adaptation of the classic Gothic novel does much to reclaim the work, to restart its deep-probing ethical and moral search, and to begin to restore its feminist foundations, even if its own narrative leaves much still deeply flawed in that way. Dispensing with Victor Frankenstein’s deeply biased male perspective, and telling its story solely as the chronicle of the pitiable, extraordinarily human creature which he selfishly forced into life, the stage show is remarkable for taking great care to properly emphasise the original work’s crucial lessons in morality and ethics, and to put renewed stress on Shelley’s dire warning of the pitfalls of science for its own sake, doing so in a gripping, beautifully-realised, poetic fashion that manages a fabulous trick of simultaneously loosely adapting the novel whilst leveraging the ensuing destructive male saviour narratives of Hammer Horror in its own ingenious, vitally interrogative way. Quite besides that, it is ever-increasingly impossible to ignore the play’s roundabout implication of the terrible, destructive social consequences of birthing an unwanted child one is ill-prepared to raise, which herein fall, for once in history, on a man.
Lee-Miller as the Creature with Cumberbatch as Frankenstein. Photography by Catherine Ashmore.
Indeed, there is much that can be read into playwright Nick Dear’s masterful, multi-faceted, beautiful scriptwriting, almost a guided tour of the most vital English literary and poetic history which is itself often movingly poetic, and which soars to lyrical, literary heights of insight into the human condition as all the best of the Victorian novels did. It charts a course straight back to the heart of Mary Shelley’s writing and ever more close to home, demanding to know who is it that gets to define what is ‘other’ and why, and what makes a monster, or a human being, and what lies in the ill-defined spaces between them.
The line between monster and man is, as is the particular USP of this production, blurred further still by the main roles of Frankenstein and the Creature being swapped nightly between leads Benedict Cumberbatch and Johnny Lee-Miller, whom each deliver their own unique takes on the respective roles. Cumberbatch gives an outstanding physical performance in his turn as The Creature, perfectly capturing the hyperactive, unfettered wonder and energy of a newborn child, and growing into a heartbreakingly embittered and damaged man who can never quite be fully formed. Johnny Lee-Miller makes a fine Frankenstein alongside him, his incarnation seemingly marked by a deep need for the illusion of his own superiority which motivates him to invest a great deal of intelligence in ignorance of the consequences of his actions. Indeed, it follows that there is much appalling ignorance poorly masked by his brilliant intelligence, and a lack of the most basic humanity disguised by so-called civility, very well performed by Lee-Miller in his turn.
Cumberbatch as the Creature with Lee-Miller as Frankenstein. Photography by Catherine Ashmore.
By contrast, Lee-Miller feels somewhat derivative and ill-fitting as the Creature. His incarnation, based on his own very young (at the time) son, is closer to a child than Cumberbatch, who, by stark contrast, approaches it as a disabled adult tasked with rediscovering movement, and ultimately humanity, rather than finding it for the first time. Which one proves the favourite will be a matter of per-person preference, but to me, Cumberbatch’s vision feels more authentic to the creature, with its adult body in which movement would be rediscovered and rebuilt rather than formed from scratch.
Lee-Miller seems one-dimensional by comparison, too much like a newborn toddler than a reconstituted man rediscovering himself. It feels oddly inauthentic, as though it suffers for making an arguable pro-choice subtext into text, speaking down to an older audience rather than meeting them on their level. He also introduces vocals to the creature too early, losing some of the tragi-dramatic impact of the creature’s first words being vulgar dismissives in the process, and he seems apart from that almost to too much drag it all out, squandering time, and slowing down the production. Indeed, Lee-Miller seems given over to slightly overplayed melodrama, and even to underplaying moments in both roles, with Cumberbatch more grounded.
Faustian bargaining. Photography by Catherine Ashmore.
Cumberbatch plays Frankenstein as a man hugely taken aback and horrified by what he has accomplished, by the reality of an experiment gone horribly right, and his is a more sympathetic incarnation, if only for not being as given to repulsive lechery as Lee-Miller with the Bride. Regardless, both bring their own unique and compelling takes to the parts, and are worth seeing in each one, though Cumberbatch, being more versatile as a performer, seems to romp home in both leads by virtue of that.
In both versions, amongst the rest of the principle cast, there is a particularly touching and memorable performance from Karl Johnson as the old man De Lacey. George Harris entertains as the Frankenstein family patriarch, bringing a suitably statesmanlike gravitas to his part. Naomie Harris endears as Elizabeth Lavenza, Victor Frankenstein’s wife-to-be, successfully further highlighting the dramatic ironies of the contrast between the Creature and his creator; and John Stahl and Mark Armstrong prove an unexpected highlight as a pair of the mad scientists’ press-ganged assistants, Euan and Raab.
Cumberbatch as a pensive Frankenstein. Photography by Catherine Ashmore
Technically, both versions of the production are a marvel of ingenious staging (customary for the National Theatre’s extraordinarily dynamic space) and artful lighting and set design. A gorgeous Victorian Steampunk aesthetic helps to lend an air of low fantasy, which sharpens rather than softens the hard edge of rage against the myriad evils of men’s unchecked arrogance and vanity which is shot through the reimagined text. The creature’s wretched, tragic existence takes form as a series of tableaus realised in in a succession of literal highlights and lowlights which are consistently enthralling to behold.
One notes that the production has been markedly improved in one the few ways it can be by cutting out its crass, voyeuristic scene of brutal sexual assault. This was never something which needed to be seen, and the production is better for it. Indeed, the play’s female characters do tend to rather get short-shrift here, merely decorating the setting, and motivating the principal men to do their various evil deeds. Others have suggested that it would perhaps have been interesting to see Naomie Harris and Andreea Padurariu swap between brides, if only to give them each more to do, and to reinforce notions of the blur between human and monster, but the thought seems to have gone that it would distract from the mens’ stories, which is a whole other tragedy unto itself.
The duality of man. Photograph by Catherine Ashmore.
Overall, though, it is clear to see why this is one of the National’s most requested productions for on-demand streaming. Beautiful, poetic, wonderfully performed, and boasting a fantastic cast, especially its two endlessly watchable leads. There is, it has been said, something Beckettian about them. Two intertwined lives defined by a vicious, unending cycle of human misery and failure, with no option but to fail and fail again. To fail better, until the world ends.
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Saturday, April 25, 2020
National Theatre Live: Treasure Island
Photography from The National Theatre
In amongst the stellar selection of lockdown entertainment offerings from the National Theatre’s YouTube channel thus far was Bryony Lavery’s adaptation of Treasure Island in a 2014 production from director Polly Findlay.
Robert Louis Stevenson’s *other* hugely influential classic novel is a piratical high adventure, which sees the brave Jim Hawkins caught up in buccaneer hijinks as they face off against the dread pirate Long John Silver in search of buried treasure.
This is a truly spectacular production, full of charm, whimsy and rollicking spirit, which is hardly ever short of breath-taking sights on its two-hour travels. Lizzie Clachan’s outstanding set design alongside Bruno Poet’s lighting, and music and songs from Dan Jones and John Tams manages to conjure up maritime atmosphere in treasure-digging spades. Gorgeously detailed and vivid backdrops abound, with much ingenious mechanical wizardry on display which keeps the production moving along at a pacey and pleasingly fluid clip.
Photography from The National Theatre
Patsy Ferran leads a strong cast as Jim Hawkins, with a refreshingly modern, even prescient, take on this so-called “boys’-own” adventurer, stubbornly refusing to be whittled down to boy or girl, and full of vim and vigour. Alongside her is Doctor Who alumni Arthur Darvill, hugely enjoyable as the dastardly, two-faced Long John Silver, with both performers having a grand old time of it, and sharing good chemistry onstage, along with some surprisingly endearing shared moments. There are no slouches amongst the rest of the principal cast either, with Gillian Hanna convincing as the crotchety Grandma, Alexandra Maher taking a good-natured pop-culture ribbing as The Doctor (complete with swishy, dandy long coat) in her stride, and many highlights present and accounted for on the good ship Hispaniola’s manifest of misfits.
Confidently and skillfully directed by Findlay, this is a lively, hugely enjoyable production perfect for all the family which captures the spirit of high adventure near-perfectly, and looks ship-shape doing it.
In amongst the stellar selection of lockdown entertainment offerings from the National Theatre’s YouTube channel thus far was Bryony Lavery’s adaptation of Treasure Island in a 2014 production from director Polly Findlay.
Robert Louis Stevenson’s *other* hugely influential classic novel is a piratical high adventure, which sees the brave Jim Hawkins caught up in buccaneer hijinks as they face off against the dread pirate Long John Silver in search of buried treasure.
This is a truly spectacular production, full of charm, whimsy and rollicking spirit, which is hardly ever short of breath-taking sights on its two-hour travels. Lizzie Clachan’s outstanding set design alongside Bruno Poet’s lighting, and music and songs from Dan Jones and John Tams manages to conjure up maritime atmosphere in treasure-digging spades. Gorgeously detailed and vivid backdrops abound, with much ingenious mechanical wizardry on display which keeps the production moving along at a pacey and pleasingly fluid clip.
Photography from The National Theatre
Patsy Ferran leads a strong cast as Jim Hawkins, with a refreshingly modern, even prescient, take on this so-called “boys’-own” adventurer, stubbornly refusing to be whittled down to boy or girl, and full of vim and vigour. Alongside her is Doctor Who alumni Arthur Darvill, hugely enjoyable as the dastardly, two-faced Long John Silver, with both performers having a grand old time of it, and sharing good chemistry onstage, along with some surprisingly endearing shared moments. There are no slouches amongst the rest of the principal cast either, with Gillian Hanna convincing as the crotchety Grandma, Alexandra Maher taking a good-natured pop-culture ribbing as The Doctor (complete with swishy, dandy long coat) in her stride, and many highlights present and accounted for on the good ship Hispaniola’s manifest of misfits.
Confidently and skillfully directed by Findlay, this is a lively, hugely enjoyable production perfect for all the family which captures the spirit of high adventure near-perfectly, and looks ship-shape doing it.
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
"The Nobodies" by Chalk Line Theatre
This is a recollection of a performance on February 20th 2020. Also published in London Theatre Reviews, April 21st 2020: http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2780
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Following on from an impressive debut showing with Testament at the Hope Theatre, the Chalk Line Theatre company returns, this time to the VAULTS Festival, with a second offering from writer Amy Guyler in the form of The Nobodies.
Where previous outing Testament dived into the murky depths of male mental health and masculinities, Chalk Line remains keenly socio-political here, telling a new, but no less grimly relevant tale of existential horror through Guyler’s writing, which crackles throughout with all the pacey drama and darkly comic humour, as well as the witticism and insightfulness that has hallmarked Chalk Line’s offerings thus far.
The talented trio of Lucy Simpson, David Angland, and Joseph Reed each thoroughly convince in their parts as radical young socialists Rhea, Aaron, and Curtis respectively, as their group of would-be activists are driven to bribe and blackmail politicians to get their notion of social justice. Before any of them know it, some ill-advised improvisation in a fix starts a radical peoples’ movement which inevitably spirals out of all control, and all manner of ethical horrors ensue in a story which no doubt owes a considerable debt to the stylings of Fight Club and its ilk.
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Fortunately, Guyler and the cast manage to bring plenty of distinctly theatrical style, substance, and uniqueness to what might have felt too derivative in less capable hands, and there is much more besides to love about this original production, which pointedly asks searching, discomforting questions about the true moral righteousness of radicals.
Alongside Guyler’s fine writing, and the cast’s great performances, the intimate surroundings of the VAULT stage’s tiny space are put to some very creative and inventive uses by set designer Becca White, whose great sense of place in (quite literally) assembling a scene is ably assisted by atmospheric lighting from Alan Walden, and Mekel Edwards’ evocative sound design. All the while, Vikesh Godhwani and Sam Edmunds’ joint direction makes for a tightly-focused, pacey and very enjoyable evening of drama which certainly proves memorable for its audience. It seems destined for a life well-lived when it transfers to the Edinburgh Festival in the indeterminate future, when (in the words of Beckett) Happy Days will come again.
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Following on from an impressive debut showing with Testament at the Hope Theatre, the Chalk Line Theatre company returns, this time to the VAULTS Festival, with a second offering from writer Amy Guyler in the form of The Nobodies.
Where previous outing Testament dived into the murky depths of male mental health and masculinities, Chalk Line remains keenly socio-political here, telling a new, but no less grimly relevant tale of existential horror through Guyler’s writing, which crackles throughout with all the pacey drama and darkly comic humour, as well as the witticism and insightfulness that has hallmarked Chalk Line’s offerings thus far.
The talented trio of Lucy Simpson, David Angland, and Joseph Reed each thoroughly convince in their parts as radical young socialists Rhea, Aaron, and Curtis respectively, as their group of would-be activists are driven to bribe and blackmail politicians to get their notion of social justice. Before any of them know it, some ill-advised improvisation in a fix starts a radical peoples’ movement which inevitably spirals out of all control, and all manner of ethical horrors ensue in a story which no doubt owes a considerable debt to the stylings of Fight Club and its ilk.
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Fortunately, Guyler and the cast manage to bring plenty of distinctly theatrical style, substance, and uniqueness to what might have felt too derivative in less capable hands, and there is much more besides to love about this original production, which pointedly asks searching, discomforting questions about the true moral righteousness of radicals.
Alongside Guyler’s fine writing, and the cast’s great performances, the intimate surroundings of the VAULT stage’s tiny space are put to some very creative and inventive uses by set designer Becca White, whose great sense of place in (quite literally) assembling a scene is ably assisted by atmospheric lighting from Alan Walden, and Mekel Edwards’ evocative sound design. All the while, Vikesh Godhwani and Sam Edmunds’ joint direction makes for a tightly-focused, pacey and very enjoyable evening of drama which certainly proves memorable for its audience. It seems destined for a life well-lived when it transfers to the Edinburgh Festival in the indeterminate future, when (in the words of Beckett) Happy Days will come again.
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Thursday, April 16, 2020
National Theatre Live: One Man, Two Guv'nors
Photography by Johan Persson
Writer Richard Bean’s accomplished adaptation of 1746 Italian farce The Servant of Two Masters by Carlo Goldoni transports the original’s evergreen comic scenario - a poor, starving fool of a Harlequin blundering into waiting on two masters at deadly odds with one another, in search of an extra meal - to Brighton in 1963, where the modern Truffaldino takes the form of the hapless Francis Henshall, lately fired from his Skiffle band and caught between two sets of hardy East End gangsters intent on killing each other. Commedia dell’arte ensues as Francis recklessly bumbles his way through every desperate effort to stop each finding out about the other, whilst eating literally everything he can get his hands on.
Opening to unanimous critical acclaim during its original 2011 run with the National Theatre, and becoming a global phenomenon, director Nicholas Hytner’s outstanding work is these days rightfully regarded as a modern classic the British stage. Today, in the throes of our prolonged global quarantine, it proves unweathered by the long near-decade since, as fresh, inventive, energetic and full of laughter as ever, and now, a sorely-needed tonic for these lonely days.
The full cast. Photography by Johan Persson
This is a spectacular production, alive with enthusiasm and almost bursting with love for the craft in every aspect. Mark Thompson’s beautifully realised, clever set design transports us effortlessly everywhere around the city of Brighton, from stately homes to the mean streets, to the posh restaurants in-between; Grant Olding seemingly captures the lightning of 60s rockabilly in a bottle and tosses it back to us via the considerable talents of in-house band The Craze, taking us on a musical journey back through time and placing us perfectly in situ in 1963; the Craze themselves treat us to their infectiously energetic, feel-good rockabilly stylings throughout, performing a short albums’ worth of memorable and ridiculously catchy numbers at (literal) intervals throughout; and certainly not least, an impeccably chosen cast make every performance a highlight down to the smallest of bit-parts, with even the ensemble giving some shockingly convincing turns in danger of bamboozling uninitiated or unwary viewers (or indeed, sympathetic reviewers).
To mention any stand-outs would be to list the whole cast, whom all – from lead James Corden’s pitch-perfect Francis Henshall, to Suze Toase’s delightful, doggedly driven Dolly, and Oliver Chris’ side-splitting Stanley Stubbers – display a spectacular talent for making the rigorously rehearsed seem improvisational, and never fail to do justice to the beautifully literary, playful, sparklingly intelligent, and laugh-out-loud hilarious writing of Richard Bean.
Daniel Rigby as Alan Dangle with Oliver Chris as Stanley Stubbers. Photography by Johan Persson
Indeed, it seems easy to see why this was the first choice for our onrush of indoor theatre of a rather different sort. It represents the best possible opening night: a definitive, superlative run of a classic, so practically perfect in every way that it would perhaps be no loss to the art of theatre to put a stop to all future staging efforts on account of the work having already achieved its pinnacle. A five-star tour-de-force of farce.
Suze Toase as Dolly with James Corden as Francis Henshall. Photography by Johan Persson.
Writer Richard Bean’s accomplished adaptation of 1746 Italian farce The Servant of Two Masters by Carlo Goldoni transports the original’s evergreen comic scenario - a poor, starving fool of a Harlequin blundering into waiting on two masters at deadly odds with one another, in search of an extra meal - to Brighton in 1963, where the modern Truffaldino takes the form of the hapless Francis Henshall, lately fired from his Skiffle band and caught between two sets of hardy East End gangsters intent on killing each other. Commedia dell’arte ensues as Francis recklessly bumbles his way through every desperate effort to stop each finding out about the other, whilst eating literally everything he can get his hands on.
Opening to unanimous critical acclaim during its original 2011 run with the National Theatre, and becoming a global phenomenon, director Nicholas Hytner’s outstanding work is these days rightfully regarded as a modern classic the British stage. Today, in the throes of our prolonged global quarantine, it proves unweathered by the long near-decade since, as fresh, inventive, energetic and full of laughter as ever, and now, a sorely-needed tonic for these lonely days.
The full cast. Photography by Johan Persson
This is a spectacular production, alive with enthusiasm and almost bursting with love for the craft in every aspect. Mark Thompson’s beautifully realised, clever set design transports us effortlessly everywhere around the city of Brighton, from stately homes to the mean streets, to the posh restaurants in-between; Grant Olding seemingly captures the lightning of 60s rockabilly in a bottle and tosses it back to us via the considerable talents of in-house band The Craze, taking us on a musical journey back through time and placing us perfectly in situ in 1963; the Craze themselves treat us to their infectiously energetic, feel-good rockabilly stylings throughout, performing a short albums’ worth of memorable and ridiculously catchy numbers at (literal) intervals throughout; and certainly not least, an impeccably chosen cast make every performance a highlight down to the smallest of bit-parts, with even the ensemble giving some shockingly convincing turns in danger of bamboozling uninitiated or unwary viewers (or indeed, sympathetic reviewers).
To mention any stand-outs would be to list the whole cast, whom all – from lead James Corden’s pitch-perfect Francis Henshall, to Suze Toase’s delightful, doggedly driven Dolly, and Oliver Chris’ side-splitting Stanley Stubbers – display a spectacular talent for making the rigorously rehearsed seem improvisational, and never fail to do justice to the beautifully literary, playful, sparklingly intelligent, and laugh-out-loud hilarious writing of Richard Bean.
Daniel Rigby as Alan Dangle with Oliver Chris as Stanley Stubbers. Photography by Johan Persson
Indeed, it seems easy to see why this was the first choice for our onrush of indoor theatre of a rather different sort. It represents the best possible opening night: a definitive, superlative run of a classic, so practically perfect in every way that it would perhaps be no loss to the art of theatre to put a stop to all future staging efforts on account of the work having already achieved its pinnacle. A five-star tour-de-force of farce.
Suze Toase as Dolly with James Corden as Francis Henshall. Photography by Johan Persson.
Friday, March 13, 2020
Alan Bennett's "Talking Heads" by Brigid Larmour
Also published in London Theatre Reviews, March 12th 2020: http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2547
Staging a select trio of Alan Bennett’s famous series of BBC monologues – namely “A Lady of Letters”, “Bed Among The Lentils”, and “Soldiering On” - director Brigid Larmour revives the work together with her leading ladies, “Casualty” star Julia Watson and Jan Ravens of “Dead Ringers” fame.
This is a superbly-realised production in every respect. As Artistic Director of the Watford Palace, Larmour knows her beautiful, well-appointed surroundings intimately, and keenly demonstrates their best use by way of the sparse, portrait-like set design (courtesy of Designer Basia Bińkowska and Scenic Artist Aimee Bunyard), helping to draw all attention towards her wonderfully talented lead performers, and the beautifully detailed, evocative writing of Alan Bennett. Tom Desmond’s Sound Design and Bethany Gupwell’s Lighting Design also jointly assist in giving proceedings a light, delightfully whimsical flourish of detail that greatly enhances whilst never distracting, and appears effortless precisely because of great effort.
Much the same is true of both leads in this production, each one giving excellent, artful performances which are full of huge presence, shining personality, and infinite, sympathetic humanity. Jan Ravens is absolutely superb in her joint roles as Muriel and Miss Ruddock, each their own distinct breed of heart-rendingly tragic figure, and full of their own unique, fully-realised and full-rounded humanity. Julia Watson is outstanding as well, cutting a complex and sympathetic figure as the deeply troubled Susan; and each has been skilfully directed with purposeful confidence by Larmour, who never forgets the need for some physicality and movement to lend some visual action to a work heavy on its dialogue.
Meanwhile, Bennett’s writing is full of its hallmarked, often horrendously dark humour, perfectly timed and delivered, and yet still barely able to disguise a razor-keen edge of the macabre. Creeping dread and mounting tension seep through every precisely-chosen word of the trio of monologues, pushing inevitably onwards towards the emotional devastation, tragedy and horror at their respective cores, all the while dealing unabashedly with the urgent, topical issues of loneliness, isolation, mental illness, substance abuse, and plain abuse itself. It is some of Beckett’s finest, with the beauty of his prose never disguising, but only lifting the veil from perfectly realised human imperfection and ugliness – all of which is more-than-capably performed by the best women for the job, who bring everything to vividly-illustrated life, and allow this superb writing to ascend to its full heartbreaking and hilarious heights in their masterful performances.
Magnificent, beautiful work, showing all the evidence of art.
Safe Sex - Network Theatre, VAULTS Festival
Also published in London Theatre Reviews, March 12th 2020: http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2539
Actor and playwright Harvey Fierstein’s own creative efforts to come to terms with the AIDS crisis in 1980s New York is revived by director Jacob Trenerry at the Network Theatre for the VAULTS Festival.
The short, dialogue-driven piece sees two gay men, Ghee (Sam Neal) and Mead (George White) try desperately to negotiate and navigate their own fraught love life in the wake of the AIDS epidemic, and the ensuing widespread gay panic. Trenerry, along with Assistant Director Joanna Coulton, insists upon an intense, unapologetically queer experience, much to the work’s benefit. There is undeniable power and atmosphere here, ably assisted by the lighting and sound team of Paul Evans and Chris Olsen, together with the clever set design – resembling a see-saw, and reflecting, as it does, the precarious social balancing act required of gay people situated in that place and time in the movement’s history.
Photography by Paul Hajisavvi
With Kathryn Stevens’ voice coaching, both leads put on passable, if somewhat uneven, Brooklyn accents, and perform in their roles very well. Sam Neal in particular bears the brunt of the writing, and carries it off expertly, proving lively, funny, and emotive, as well as capable of rousing genuine shock and awe in dramatic moments. There is enjoyable and clever visual playfulness from the directors, too, with both men clearly coming from vastly different socio-economic backgrounds; the interplay of sex and vice – one dirtily smoking, the other classily drinking – visually intertwining and equating gay sex with vice unto itself, reinforcing that socio-political urgency in the text and evoking sympathy with an audience made to realise that these prejudices are being socially manufactured for political expediency in much the same way as any play is staged.
Fierstein’s writing itself is also a highlight of the production. Full of wit, honesty, and truthfulness, with a keen edge of political radicalism and deeply-felt human sympathy to it, one initially might be reminded of the nihilism and despair of a signature Beckett play, if only this play had not forgotten its warmth and levity, so that, despite everything, there remain reasons to smile, and to hope. Surely something to take no small amount of gay pride in.
Actor and playwright Harvey Fierstein’s own creative efforts to come to terms with the AIDS crisis in 1980s New York is revived by director Jacob Trenerry at the Network Theatre for the VAULTS Festival.
The short, dialogue-driven piece sees two gay men, Ghee (Sam Neal) and Mead (George White) try desperately to negotiate and navigate their own fraught love life in the wake of the AIDS epidemic, and the ensuing widespread gay panic. Trenerry, along with Assistant Director Joanna Coulton, insists upon an intense, unapologetically queer experience, much to the work’s benefit. There is undeniable power and atmosphere here, ably assisted by the lighting and sound team of Paul Evans and Chris Olsen, together with the clever set design – resembling a see-saw, and reflecting, as it does, the precarious social balancing act required of gay people situated in that place and time in the movement’s history.
Photography by Paul Hajisavvi
With Kathryn Stevens’ voice coaching, both leads put on passable, if somewhat uneven, Brooklyn accents, and perform in their roles very well. Sam Neal in particular bears the brunt of the writing, and carries it off expertly, proving lively, funny, and emotive, as well as capable of rousing genuine shock and awe in dramatic moments. There is enjoyable and clever visual playfulness from the directors, too, with both men clearly coming from vastly different socio-economic backgrounds; the interplay of sex and vice – one dirtily smoking, the other classily drinking – visually intertwining and equating gay sex with vice unto itself, reinforcing that socio-political urgency in the text and evoking sympathy with an audience made to realise that these prejudices are being socially manufactured for political expediency in much the same way as any play is staged.
Fierstein’s writing itself is also a highlight of the production. Full of wit, honesty, and truthfulness, with a keen edge of political radicalism and deeply-felt human sympathy to it, one initially might be reminded of the nihilism and despair of a signature Beckett play, if only this play had not forgotten its warmth and levity, so that, despite everything, there remain reasons to smile, and to hope. Surely something to take no small amount of gay pride in.
Saturday, March 7, 2020
Drip Drip Drip by Pipeline Theatre
Also published by London Theatre Reviews, March 7th 2020:
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2509
The fifth production from Pipeline Theatre, and writer Jon Welch, Drip Drip Drip tells the tale of an NHS pushed to its absolute limits – this time not by Conservative budget cuts, but by testing the fundamental principle of care for absolutely everyone regardless, when a team of immigrant doctors and staff find themselves compelled to make a dying Nazi apologist comfortable.
It’s a play firmly in the urgently political, meta-theatrical tradition of Bertolt Brecht, merged with the visceral social realism of Jim Cartwright, and the resulting explosive combination produces sincere excellence so outstanding that it almost transcends theatre and becomes a witnessed experience of life itself.
Welch’s extraordinary, meticulous writing is full of real life, shining lyricism, inexhaustible dynamism, and an abiding empathy and love for all of humanity so acute that it feels autobiographical – something made even more remarkable by the fact that Welch is a middle-aged white man with a life nothing like the characters he so perfectly imagines in his work.
The first-rate writing is carried by the work’s other greatest strength, a superb professional cast, all of whom perform flawlessly, and bring everything to life so recognisably that all awareness of the artifice of theatre seemingly disappears, with the audience liable to be left feeling less as if they are watching a play, and more as though they are stealing a shameful, perverse look through a window, into real, suffering peoples’ wretched lives. It seems that Welch has not merely written characters, nor are the cast simply playing parts – but that they have brought genuine human beings to full and vivid life, as all great writing and performance should.
One could easily meet any of these wonderfully-realised people on the street, let alone see them in a theatre play. David Keller is superb as the rambling, scatter-brained academic facing death as a disgraced Nazi sympathiser; Alan Munden totally convinces as the hospital porter who could be any oddball full of nasty little prejudices towards every sort of othered person, whether he means to have them or not; Lydia Bakelmun perfectly embodies the horrendous strains of professional and personal life both as a Muslim doctor and as a woman of colour; and at the true heart of the work are Girum Bekele and Michael Workeye as two loving brothers, struggling refugees torn apart by cruel happenstance, who together send the work hurtling towards its utterly heartbreaking finale, in which one struggles not to weep bitter tears of righteous indignation and fury at the sheer damned inhumanity. There are not enough superlatives for it all.
Ably assisting all this brilliance is the set design of Jude and Alan Munden. Visually sparse in a suitably Brechtian way, allowing the focus to fall on the excellent performances and writing, it nevertheless proves versatile for being so compact, and capable of its own visually striking performances. Some clever use of projection also aids the sense of place and character nicely throughout.
In all, a simply superb production. Flawlessly performed, powerful, righteously angry, poetic, and emotionally devastating. A superlative tour-de-force that demands to be seen and heard. Do so.
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2509
The fifth production from Pipeline Theatre, and writer Jon Welch, Drip Drip Drip tells the tale of an NHS pushed to its absolute limits – this time not by Conservative budget cuts, but by testing the fundamental principle of care for absolutely everyone regardless, when a team of immigrant doctors and staff find themselves compelled to make a dying Nazi apologist comfortable.
It’s a play firmly in the urgently political, meta-theatrical tradition of Bertolt Brecht, merged with the visceral social realism of Jim Cartwright, and the resulting explosive combination produces sincere excellence so outstanding that it almost transcends theatre and becomes a witnessed experience of life itself.
Welch’s extraordinary, meticulous writing is full of real life, shining lyricism, inexhaustible dynamism, and an abiding empathy and love for all of humanity so acute that it feels autobiographical – something made even more remarkable by the fact that Welch is a middle-aged white man with a life nothing like the characters he so perfectly imagines in his work.
The first-rate writing is carried by the work’s other greatest strength, a superb professional cast, all of whom perform flawlessly, and bring everything to life so recognisably that all awareness of the artifice of theatre seemingly disappears, with the audience liable to be left feeling less as if they are watching a play, and more as though they are stealing a shameful, perverse look through a window, into real, suffering peoples’ wretched lives. It seems that Welch has not merely written characters, nor are the cast simply playing parts – but that they have brought genuine human beings to full and vivid life, as all great writing and performance should.
One could easily meet any of these wonderfully-realised people on the street, let alone see them in a theatre play. David Keller is superb as the rambling, scatter-brained academic facing death as a disgraced Nazi sympathiser; Alan Munden totally convinces as the hospital porter who could be any oddball full of nasty little prejudices towards every sort of othered person, whether he means to have them or not; Lydia Bakelmun perfectly embodies the horrendous strains of professional and personal life both as a Muslim doctor and as a woman of colour; and at the true heart of the work are Girum Bekele and Michael Workeye as two loving brothers, struggling refugees torn apart by cruel happenstance, who together send the work hurtling towards its utterly heartbreaking finale, in which one struggles not to weep bitter tears of righteous indignation and fury at the sheer damned inhumanity. There are not enough superlatives for it all.
Ably assisting all this brilliance is the set design of Jude and Alan Munden. Visually sparse in a suitably Brechtian way, allowing the focus to fall on the excellent performances and writing, it nevertheless proves versatile for being so compact, and capable of its own visually striking performances. Some clever use of projection also aids the sense of place and character nicely throughout.
In all, a simply superb production. Flawlessly performed, powerful, righteously angry, poetic, and emotionally devastating. A superlative tour-de-force that demands to be seen and heard. Do so.
Thursday, March 5, 2020
John Cleese's "Bang-Bang!" at the Yvone Arnaud
Also published by London Theatre Reviews, March 5th 2020:
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2501
Recently revived from its brief slumber after a 2017 run at the Mercury Theatre in Colchester, Fawlty Towers veteran John Cleese (yes, that one) brings his debut farce to Guilford’s Yvone Arnaud. Cleese’s first scriptwriting foray, bearing all the hallmarks of heavy boyhood influence from French satirist Georges Feydeau, adapts the playwright’s little-known French farce Monsieur Chasse – and does a suitably bang-up job.
Leading lady Leontine (Tessa Peake-Jones) becomes convinced her husband Duchatel (Tony Gardener) is having an affair, and determines to enact revenge by carrying on a torrid tryst herself with her secret lover, the family physician Moricet (Richard Earl). Naturally, hilarious chaos ensues between all the members this dysfunctional 19th-century French noble family as the Monty Python star’s exuberant first-rate writing crackles with characteristic Fawlty-esque wit, ingeniously filtering French farce through all the Cleese classics of British comedy whilst a hugely talented ensemble cast of performers bring it all to endlessly watchable, laugh-out-loud (larger-than) life.
Photography by Paul Blakemore
Under the close eyes of writer John Cleese (yes, that one), and skilled director Daniel Buckroyd, the relentlessly fast pace is pitch-perfect, and comic timing is drilled to near-flawlessness, with nary a dull moment to speak of. This is a suitably lavish and elegant production, too, with designer David Shields outfitting every superb performer in beautiful costumes to tread the boards of his extraordinarily comely and cleverly-designed set, with cast and crew ingeniously conniving to distract our attentions whilst the setting quietly shifts and changes.
So much the better for it that this cast has seemingly boundless energy and enthusiasm for their work, with all of their performances soaring to wonderful heights of comic flamboyance, down to each and every part – from Daniel Burke’s delightfully mischievous Gontran to Vicki Davids’ sly Babette, and all in-between, and beyond - especially the wonderfully entertaining turn from Wendi Peters as Madame Latour, whom proves a woman of many talents.
A spectacular production, limitlessly lively, joyful, and funny, and above all, tremendously entertaining. A French farce Fawlty Towers for everyone fond of theatre, that earns a resounding bravo to Monsieur Cleese (yes, that one).
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2501
Recently revived from its brief slumber after a 2017 run at the Mercury Theatre in Colchester, Fawlty Towers veteran John Cleese (yes, that one) brings his debut farce to Guilford’s Yvone Arnaud. Cleese’s first scriptwriting foray, bearing all the hallmarks of heavy boyhood influence from French satirist Georges Feydeau, adapts the playwright’s little-known French farce Monsieur Chasse – and does a suitably bang-up job.
Leading lady Leontine (Tessa Peake-Jones) becomes convinced her husband Duchatel (Tony Gardener) is having an affair, and determines to enact revenge by carrying on a torrid tryst herself with her secret lover, the family physician Moricet (Richard Earl). Naturally, hilarious chaos ensues between all the members this dysfunctional 19th-century French noble family as the Monty Python star’s exuberant first-rate writing crackles with characteristic Fawlty-esque wit, ingeniously filtering French farce through all the Cleese classics of British comedy whilst a hugely talented ensemble cast of performers bring it all to endlessly watchable, laugh-out-loud (larger-than) life.
Photography by Paul Blakemore
Under the close eyes of writer John Cleese (yes, that one), and skilled director Daniel Buckroyd, the relentlessly fast pace is pitch-perfect, and comic timing is drilled to near-flawlessness, with nary a dull moment to speak of. This is a suitably lavish and elegant production, too, with designer David Shields outfitting every superb performer in beautiful costumes to tread the boards of his extraordinarily comely and cleverly-designed set, with cast and crew ingeniously conniving to distract our attentions whilst the setting quietly shifts and changes.
So much the better for it that this cast has seemingly boundless energy and enthusiasm for their work, with all of their performances soaring to wonderful heights of comic flamboyance, down to each and every part – from Daniel Burke’s delightfully mischievous Gontran to Vicki Davids’ sly Babette, and all in-between, and beyond - especially the wonderfully entertaining turn from Wendi Peters as Madame Latour, whom proves a woman of many talents.
A spectacular production, limitlessly lively, joyful, and funny, and above all, tremendously entertaining. A French farce Fawlty Towers for everyone fond of theatre, that earns a resounding bravo to Monsieur Cleese (yes, that one).
Saturday, February 29, 2020
"Sweat" by Ian Hoare
Also published by London Theatre Reviews, February 29th 2020: http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2478
Hot on the heels of its critically-acclaimed West End run, the Tower Theatre have seized the first opportunity to stage Lynn Nottage’s timely, Pulitzer Prize-winning period drama of the endless urban war between class and capital, and its countless civilian casualties.
In rural rust-belt town of Reading, Pennsylvania in the year 2000 (readers of a certain age, perhaps sit down - 2000 qualifies as period drama these days), its community and people are caught in the ruinous hurly-burly of de-industrial revolution as the steel-work industry begins to collapse. Over the course of the play’s series of inter-connected vignettes, industrial strike action fractures the social landscape, and over the cruel course of time tears friends and family apart, poisons minds, and leaves lives ruined.
Ian Hoare directs the unfolding tragedy almost reverentially, clearly having a great admiration and respect for the material. Under his careful, light-touch stewardship, things move along at a good pace, and tension builds and maintains itself nicely throughout, with the sense of time and place reinforced by the Tower Theatre’s customarily excellent set design and use of sound to enhance their dramas. One practically steps right into an all-American watering hole on entering the theatre with Wendy Parry’s set, and the clever deployment of faux radio recordings to frame the vignettes carries us through the surrounding politics of the turn of the century, thanks to sound designer Laurence Tuerk.
Photography by David Sprecher
A strong ensemble plays out the tragic drama, with the entire cast putting in earnest and impassioned performances. It is an unfortunate hindrance to this production, though, that much of the cast seem to focus rather too much on putting on a convincing American accent, robbing Nottage’s superb writing of much of the import of its dialogue as the performers seem to be too distracted by this requirement to focus on really characterising the text. Especially in the first half, this comes across to the detriment of the production’s believability overall; but when more confident cast members, who have mastered their accent work, can put aside that worry and get on with the performance, the work is wonderfully heightened, and its brilliance shines through.
This is especially apparent in the second half, when curtain nerves have subsided, and genuinely harrowing drama powerfully plays out on its own merit, elevating the production to fantastic heights once again. It can make for a somewhat uneven presentation, but it is hard to begrudge this of a talented amateur company bravely tackling West End fare so soon after the end of its recent run.
Nevertheless, it makes for a bold and compelling night of theatre, and a perfect second opportunity to see it away from the West End.
"The Refuge" by The Balon Rouge Company
The Balon Rouge Theatre Company brings their latest production, a Gothic Christmas mystery, to the Barons Court Theatre in London. Regrettably, there is very little to feel festive or charitable about here. The decision to stage a play set at Christmas so late into a new year is a bizarre and poor choice by itself, to say nothing else of the difficulties which plague this wholly lacklustre and unconvincing show.
The writing is by far the weakest component in this uninspired, melodramatic tale, which leans heavily on references to classics of Gothic horror in an obvious and unsophisticated manner, as though crassly trying to better the work by association, but this attempt fails, and only succeeds at coming across as the worst kind of pretentious literary name-dropping.
The poor world-building is upset further by any sense of the time and place crucial to atmospheric Gothic stories skewed by characters veering wildly between speaking as if they’re in a Victorian novel - a hindrance by itself - to suddenly using bizarrely modern choice language.
The cast struggles with the insipid, one-dimensional writing and its ridiculous plot throughout, all sounding as though they have barely started read-throughs, let alone gone on stage, with none of the stilted performers at all convincing in their soap opera roles.
Sound design leaves much to be desired, too, with melodramatic, too-loud stings of clichéd suspense music forming the bulk of a distinctly unimaginative, grating soundscape, and the set – although it didn’t before seem possible – is far too small for the scope of the work’s ambition, with the attempt at audience intimacy only causing a great deal of trouble for the cast, forced to duck and weave to avoid hitting their heads on overhead speakers (to one actor’s misfortune), and leaving supposedly tense scenes of threatening pursuit looking completely ridiculous.
A dreadful, drab sleep-aid of a production, one poorly timed and executed in nearly every significant respect. One can only hope Balon Rouge does better next time. Fortunately, that shouldn’t prove too difficult.
The writing is by far the weakest component in this uninspired, melodramatic tale, which leans heavily on references to classics of Gothic horror in an obvious and unsophisticated manner, as though crassly trying to better the work by association, but this attempt fails, and only succeeds at coming across as the worst kind of pretentious literary name-dropping.
The poor world-building is upset further by any sense of the time and place crucial to atmospheric Gothic stories skewed by characters veering wildly between speaking as if they’re in a Victorian novel - a hindrance by itself - to suddenly using bizarrely modern choice language.
The cast struggles with the insipid, one-dimensional writing and its ridiculous plot throughout, all sounding as though they have barely started read-throughs, let alone gone on stage, with none of the stilted performers at all convincing in their soap opera roles.
Sound design leaves much to be desired, too, with melodramatic, too-loud stings of clichéd suspense music forming the bulk of a distinctly unimaginative, grating soundscape, and the set – although it didn’t before seem possible – is far too small for the scope of the work’s ambition, with the attempt at audience intimacy only causing a great deal of trouble for the cast, forced to duck and weave to avoid hitting their heads on overhead speakers (to one actor’s misfortune), and leaving supposedly tense scenes of threatening pursuit looking completely ridiculous.
A dreadful, drab sleep-aid of a production, one poorly timed and executed in nearly every significant respect. One can only hope Balon Rouge does better next time. Fortunately, that shouldn’t prove too difficult.
Thursday, February 13, 2020
E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India by Simona Hughes at The Tower Theatre
My dearly-departed paternal grandmother was born and raised an Anglo-Indian in Calcutta, her young life spent with war always brewing, either with the wider world, or the British occupation, before her father – a non-serving British Army brat whose forefathers had, for five generations, faithfully served the Empire’s cause – forcefully declared one day, as all around them was destroyed by resistance fighting in the streets, that “these idiots can kill themselves if they please, but my family will have nothing to do with it”, and fled to England, where his family found themselves so helpless without their old servants that they could not so much as make a cup of tea by themselves.
My extended family on her side, in particular my great uncle, retain their distinctly dark brown skin tones. Her five children with her Franco-Italian husband are clearly ethnically mixed – but by the time of my brothers and I, all that remains are the stories she passed down to me. I often wonder at times how to reconcile myself with that erased biological history, with the bizarre colonial implications of its having been subsumed by European whiteness, and never to return to our bloodline. I do not want children. I feel great sorrow and pity for my forebears that this history of our family, along with all those stories of India, and of the Indian women that lived before my grandmother, may well die with me. I am drawn back across the tides of time to the Raj with the overpowering sense that the history of British India is my own family’s immediate history.
Adnan Kapadia stars. Credit: Robert Piwko
Martin Sherman’s theatrical adaptation of E.M. Forster’s classic novel serves as a timely reminder that the dynamics of human relations both within and across cultures and time periods are infinitely complex and delicate – and that our imperial history is far less clear-cut and rosy than many today may be inclined to remember it. When the magnanimous and friendly Indian Doctor Aziz (Rahul Singh) is accused of a terrible crime against an English woman, a terrible clash of cultures ensues, one in which the full ugliness of the evils of imperialism, colonialism, racism, and naked white supremacy is revealed.
Director Simona Hughes, together with an unusually large cast, brings a new adaptation to the Tower Theatre in Stoke Newington – one which may come to stand as one of the best, and most exquisitely beautiful, the company has ever produced, and which one is loathe to divulge too much detail on for fear of spoiling a wonderful experience. This is an absolutely gorgeous production, with Max Batty’s picturesque, dynamic set front and centre in the proceedings, making excellent use of the Tower’s stage throughout. Stephen Ley’s beautiful lighting sets the tone perfectly, and this play in particular pushes the boundaries of anything the company has previously attempted in their space with the use of evocative light and shadow.
Credit: Robert Piwko
Costume designers Sue Carling and Elion Mittiga have perfected the era’s sartorial sensibilities, with every member of the cast superbly dressed, and the triple-threat of sound designer Rob Hebblethwaite, soundtrack composer Tamara Douglas-Morris, and live musicians Mahesh Parkar, Devina Vekaria, and Amiya Bhatia creating an immersive, authentic soundscape of time and place wonderfully steeped in lyrical mysticism. Things move along at a gripping, pacey clip with Hughes’ tight direction, which doesn’t forget when to slow down, nor how to pace these slower moments, resulting in an almost pitch-perfect runtime. Above all, Sherman’s writing sparkles as much as ever, beautifully composed, with so much of it still retaining all of its power to shock and to sober, and to reverberate through to our modern age.
So, too, does this adaptation showcase a huge number of superb, memorable performances from its huge – and hugely talented – cast of 17. Lead Rahul Singh brings Dr. Aziz to vivid life, brimming with infectious, vivacious joy and energy as well as beautifully portraying the aftermath of the terrible accusations against him. South Asian Theatre veteran Adnan Kapadia as Professor Narayan Godbole makes for a wonderfully expressive and evocative narrator of events, and Alison Liney turns in a particularly moving performance as Mrs. Moore, very much the work’s moral centre. Meanwhile, Rebecca Allan is compelling as the conflicted and complex Adela Quested, Simon Lee convinces as the brave and dignified, though very much flawed would-be white saviour Cyril Fielding, and Robin Taylor makes a superb Tower debut performance as the hateful villain of the piece, Ronny Heaslop. So, too, does Paul Willcocks get his turn as a detestable bad sort with a memorable performance as the cruel and conniving McBryde.
Rahul Singh's Dr. Aziz with Alison Lily's Mrs. Moore. Credit: Robert Piwko.
A beautiful, evocative, heartbreaking drama of how Gods are born and made, brought to life superbly in every aspect, and which soars to spectacular lyrical heights. That much is made of poetry in this narrative is no coincidence: Sherman’s adaptation is poetry in motion, and the Tower’s masterful adaptation does it full justice. Not to be missed.
"Macbeth" by Douglas Rintoul at The Queen's Theatre Hornchurch
Also published by London Theatre Reviews, February 12th 2020:
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2393
Macbeth faces the Weird Sisters.
Performing at The Queen’s Theatre in Hornchurch (proud recent recipient of the 2020 Stage Awards’ London Theatre of the Year Award) in collaboration with Derby Theatre, director Douglas Rintoul and a talented, diverse cast make a valiant effort to bring Shakespeare’s superstitiously so-called Scottish Play into our modern era – one in which, some may say, it does indeed seem that certain individuals’ reckless political ambition will soon come to set Scotland at bloody odds with England.
There is certainly no lack of meta-dramatic punch, then, to this new iteration of the classic political thriller. Indeed, one could even find themselves feeling somewhat regal in the vast, well-appointed space of the Queen’s Theatre as this undoubtedly artful production plays out. Between them, Designer Ruari Murchinson, Lighting Designer Daniella Beattie, and Sound Designer Paul Falconer have crafted beautifully evocative technical work with their set. As the play begins, an inspired clash of light and shadow immerses us in the backstory of war and strife, and throughout the 2-and-a-half-hour runtime, the drama is accompanied by picturesque Gothic imagery aplenty, bringing a wonderfully engrossing atmosphere to proceedings. The stage is a characterful presence unto itself, most befitting of a play that revels in the sinister machinations of unseen ghostly forces.
Lady Macbeth pours poison in Macbeth's ear.
Rintoul confidently directs the work to move at an often bewilderingly swift, panicked pace, perhaps trying to evoke feelings of the Macbeths’ guilt-ridden panic at their terrible deeds, a choice which doesn’t necessarily work, particularly in the work’s first half, and especially before the grisly regicide central to the plot. Although those already familiar with the text will be able to comfortably follow along, and the cast are no doubt full of a range of diverse experience and talent, it nevertheless feels as though they are rushing through the text most of the time, without giving much of Shakespeare’s wonderfully evocative wordplay time to breathe, and to properly impact the audience. A play of murder most foul this may be, but its pace need not be quite so break-neck.
In a work which thrives on a deliberately slow build-up of unbearable tension, everyone being in such a seeming haste to recite the lines cannot help but feel like an oddly inappropriate directorial choice. Many talented people end up deprived of chances to deploy the full depth of their skills when so much of their focus seems to be on hurrying things along, and this is a great shame, since many of the play’s best moments come precisely when the pace slows down enough to enjoy their work. Paul Tinto’s Macbeth proves capable of delivering affecting monologues and commanding real stage presence when he is not distracted by having to hurry – indeed, his whole performance is worsened at those times when he is compelled to overplay maddened ranting with far too much speed, ending up almost totally unintelligible to the audience. This is most unbecoming of a play that absolutely depends on the clear and precise use of language by its actors, particularly one that already has the proper pitch and pace built-in as standard by iambic pentameter in the first place.
Macbeth weighs his deeds.
So, too, do Lady Macbeth’s best moments come from laying off of the production’s full throttle. Leading lady Phoebe Sparrow’s screaming anguish and maddened sense of unreality is genuinely, wonderfully disturbing to behold when she is being given the time and space to play out the moment to its full dramatic potential – but she is let down for much of the rest of the time by too much pressure to hurry. Many of the play’s talented cast are reduced to performances that feel as though they are little more than too-hasty readings, when much of their best material is arrived at during deliberately slower moments. Amongst them, Rikki Chamberlain is hugely entertaining as the bumbling Porter; Martin Johnston is a fine King Duncan, as well as a solid double act as a Doctor, together with Connie Walker’s Gentlewoman; Adam Karim is a compelling Banquo when given the chance; Ewan Somers is full of righteous fury as Macduff, with Danielle Kassaraté bringing beautifully performed presence to Lady Macduff, as well as a variety of smaller roles; and Tilda Wickham makes for a striking, motivated Malcolm refreshingly free of gendered convention.
Quite apart from the sometimes absurd speed of the run – one perhaps too conscious of our ravaged attention spans in the digital age versus a hefty two-hour-plus runtime, especially with the school-aged in attendance – an argument could be made that this production also somewhat over-eggs the Gothic pudding at times. One counts rather a few dramatic lightning strikes amongst the technical cues, perhaps so many that it is in danger of sending this production veering headlong into 1930s Hammer Horror territory best avoided.
Nevertheless, few could argue that this is not a beautifully staged production, and one full of genuine passion and stand-out moments, amongst them, a genuinely thrilling, pacey finale – even if, rather unlike the brutal, cruel murder of King Duncan, t’were not best this were done quickly.
Lady Macduff with companions.
http://www.londontheatrereviews.co.uk/post.cfm?p=2393
Macbeth faces the Weird Sisters.
Performing at The Queen’s Theatre in Hornchurch (proud recent recipient of the 2020 Stage Awards’ London Theatre of the Year Award) in collaboration with Derby Theatre, director Douglas Rintoul and a talented, diverse cast make a valiant effort to bring Shakespeare’s superstitiously so-called Scottish Play into our modern era – one in which, some may say, it does indeed seem that certain individuals’ reckless political ambition will soon come to set Scotland at bloody odds with England.
There is certainly no lack of meta-dramatic punch, then, to this new iteration of the classic political thriller. Indeed, one could even find themselves feeling somewhat regal in the vast, well-appointed space of the Queen’s Theatre as this undoubtedly artful production plays out. Between them, Designer Ruari Murchinson, Lighting Designer Daniella Beattie, and Sound Designer Paul Falconer have crafted beautifully evocative technical work with their set. As the play begins, an inspired clash of light and shadow immerses us in the backstory of war and strife, and throughout the 2-and-a-half-hour runtime, the drama is accompanied by picturesque Gothic imagery aplenty, bringing a wonderfully engrossing atmosphere to proceedings. The stage is a characterful presence unto itself, most befitting of a play that revels in the sinister machinations of unseen ghostly forces.
Lady Macbeth pours poison in Macbeth's ear.
Rintoul confidently directs the work to move at an often bewilderingly swift, panicked pace, perhaps trying to evoke feelings of the Macbeths’ guilt-ridden panic at their terrible deeds, a choice which doesn’t necessarily work, particularly in the work’s first half, and especially before the grisly regicide central to the plot. Although those already familiar with the text will be able to comfortably follow along, and the cast are no doubt full of a range of diverse experience and talent, it nevertheless feels as though they are rushing through the text most of the time, without giving much of Shakespeare’s wonderfully evocative wordplay time to breathe, and to properly impact the audience. A play of murder most foul this may be, but its pace need not be quite so break-neck.
In a work which thrives on a deliberately slow build-up of unbearable tension, everyone being in such a seeming haste to recite the lines cannot help but feel like an oddly inappropriate directorial choice. Many talented people end up deprived of chances to deploy the full depth of their skills when so much of their focus seems to be on hurrying things along, and this is a great shame, since many of the play’s best moments come precisely when the pace slows down enough to enjoy their work. Paul Tinto’s Macbeth proves capable of delivering affecting monologues and commanding real stage presence when he is not distracted by having to hurry – indeed, his whole performance is worsened at those times when he is compelled to overplay maddened ranting with far too much speed, ending up almost totally unintelligible to the audience. This is most unbecoming of a play that absolutely depends on the clear and precise use of language by its actors, particularly one that already has the proper pitch and pace built-in as standard by iambic pentameter in the first place.
Macbeth weighs his deeds.
So, too, do Lady Macbeth’s best moments come from laying off of the production’s full throttle. Leading lady Phoebe Sparrow’s screaming anguish and maddened sense of unreality is genuinely, wonderfully disturbing to behold when she is being given the time and space to play out the moment to its full dramatic potential – but she is let down for much of the rest of the time by too much pressure to hurry. Many of the play’s talented cast are reduced to performances that feel as though they are little more than too-hasty readings, when much of their best material is arrived at during deliberately slower moments. Amongst them, Rikki Chamberlain is hugely entertaining as the bumbling Porter; Martin Johnston is a fine King Duncan, as well as a solid double act as a Doctor, together with Connie Walker’s Gentlewoman; Adam Karim is a compelling Banquo when given the chance; Ewan Somers is full of righteous fury as Macduff, with Danielle Kassaraté bringing beautifully performed presence to Lady Macduff, as well as a variety of smaller roles; and Tilda Wickham makes for a striking, motivated Malcolm refreshingly free of gendered convention.
Quite apart from the sometimes absurd speed of the run – one perhaps too conscious of our ravaged attention spans in the digital age versus a hefty two-hour-plus runtime, especially with the school-aged in attendance – an argument could be made that this production also somewhat over-eggs the Gothic pudding at times. One counts rather a few dramatic lightning strikes amongst the technical cues, perhaps so many that it is in danger of sending this production veering headlong into 1930s Hammer Horror territory best avoided.
Nevertheless, few could argue that this is not a beautifully staged production, and one full of genuine passion and stand-out moments, amongst them, a genuinely thrilling, pacey finale – even if, rather unlike the brutal, cruel murder of King Duncan, t’were not best this were done quickly.
Lady Macduff with companions.
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