Monday, 19 August 2019

A Midsummer Night's Dream

by William Shakespeare

seen at the Bridge Theatre on 17 August 2019

Nicholas Hytner directs Oliver Chris as Oberon and Theseus and Gwendoline Christie as Titania and Hippolyta in an inventive restaging of this perennially favourite play, with David Moorst as Puck and Hammed Animashaun as Bottom. The production is designed by Bunny Christie.

As with last year's production of Julius Caesar (reviewed on both 27 January and 27 March 2018) the Bridge has been transformed into a theatre in the round with a central pit area where audience members can stand and be moved around by stewards as various parts of the floor rise to become acting spaces. There is no need for a crowd as such in this play, so there is less immediate involvement than in the other play, but the mere presence of so many people 'in the way' underscores the confusions the mere mortals undergo as they enter the forest outside Athens.

Sunday, 18 August 2019

Peter Gynt

by David Hare after Henrik Ibsen

seen at National Theatre (Olivier) on 16 August 2019

Jonathan Kent directs James McArdle in the title role of David Hare's adaptation of Ibsen's dramatic poem Peer Gynt, the story of a man consumed by the need to be and feel authentic, heedless of the effect this has on those around him. Pruned of the elevated poetry, and relocated from Norway to Scotland, the play proves to be compelling, touching and often very comic, though it certainly takes a darker turn as the evening progresses, as the irrepressible young Peter grows older and more disillusioned with life.

On the exposed Olivier stage almost every scene is set outdoors (designed by Richard Hudson), whether just outside his mother's hut, down at the village where a wedding is supposed to be taking place, even in the kingdom of the mountain trolls, and then on a golf course in Florida, or in the African desert after a plane crash, or at sea in a fateful storm. The restlessness of Peter's life is thus emphasised by the lack of domesticity: when he first visits his mother all the talk is outside the dwelling and he finishes up leaving her on the roof of her hut so that she cannot interfere with his plans, and even at her death she seems to be as much in the fields as on her deathbed.

Friday, 9 August 2019

2019 Directors' Festival 3 and 4

seen at the Orange Tree Theatre on 8 August 2019

The Orange Tree Theatre, in partnership with St Mary's University Twickenham, is presenting four short plays directed by graduates of the MA program developed by the two institutions, in the third year of their partnership.

3. The Mikvah Project by Josh Azouz directed by Georgia Green

Avi (Robert Neumark Jones), a 35-year-old married man, and Eitan (Dylan Mason), a 17-year-old schoolboy, use the same mikvah (a Jewish ritual bath). Avi, devout, and hoping for a child, performs the ritual ablutions in aid of spiritual purity, while Eitan, whatever his initial motivation, soon develops a crush on the older man.  In their early conversations Avi is both amused and bemused by the boy's conversational style. Then when Eitan's attentions are unmistakeable he is at first appalled then gradually attracted himself. Somehow he finds himself deceiving his wife in order to spend a holiday weekend with Eitan (funded by money-gifts saved from the latter's bar mitzvah); but the birth of a son causes him to retreat, leaving the dejeced Eitan to grow out of this particular passion.

This is obviously a complex subject to deal with in only 75 minutes, and with only two actors to carry the story. In particular the absence of Avi's wife Leah from the stage - the interaction of husband and wife is only described by Avi - deprives us of another, and critical, view of the events; and in realistic terms we might wonder how easy it would be for a teenager in a presumably close community (even with personal funds at his disposal) to arrange a weekend away in Alicante. Despite these caveats, the play addresses many pertinent issues about unexpected passion and its disturbance of family and social loyalty.

Much of the action takes place at the mikvah, a submerged pool in the centre of the stage, perforce present even if we are temporarily at Avi's house, and doubling as the beach of the clandestine holiday. The mixture of community solidarity and personal detachment is very well conveyed in scenes where Avi talks from the position of the adult mentor of a puzzling teenager, irritated by his jargon, conventionally certain that a 'phase' must be endured and tamed. The intrusion of physical desire and attraction in a sacred space upsets and confuses the older man, and neatly represents the wider threat to his self-image. In the meantime Eitan appears to be only going through the motions of piety, in the meantime being just as interested in exploring nightclubs and the secular world.

Robert Neumark Jones gave a fine portrayal of an articulate, good-humoured and sensitive man, coming to terms with the daily routines of married life somewhat fraught by the difficulties Avi and Leah have in conceiving a child, and temporarily knocked off balance by the attentions of a male lover. Dylan Mason's Eitan showed the determination which sexual attraction can impose, especially perhaps on a youngster, though he did not quite catch the ardent passion of adolescence nor radiate its fateful charm. Full marks to the director and her team for devising the play in the already confined space of the Orange Tree's acting area with the added limitation of having a pool in the middle of it.

4. Eight Gigabytes of Hardcore Pornography by Declan Greene directed by Gianluca Lello

 Amid a collection of voices bemoaning unattractiveness or protesting unfamiliarity with the on-line dating scene, a Man (Matthew Douglas) and a Woman (Cate Hamer) emerge to reveal one particular story. They are not beautiful young people, so naturally when they finally meet each is disappointed in the physical attractiveness of the other. Prior to their meeting we are shown something of the background of each. The Man relies on pornography for his sexual enjoyment, and is sacked and disgraced after having loaded the eponymous tranche of pornography onto his work laptop. The Woman lives in an almost paranoid welter of debt, relying on buying sprees and the studious refusal to pay attention to calls from debt servicing companies. She has two children, and a husband who is in an asylum. The Man comes to live in the Woman's flat, but there is little conversation, let alone comprehension, between them, and ultimately, after a burglary engineered by the released husband, he flees. The occasional moments of tenderness release fantasies of a fulfilled and happy life, but they never translate into reality.

It's a grimly comic look at frustrated lives, made tolerable to watch by the sympathetic portrayals by the two actors. Though the Man's misogyny and the Woman's financial recklessness are hardly in doubt, their images of themselves at the centre of their own stories include redeeming characteristics - true no doubt of all our self-presentations - and it is not adequate simply to dismiss them out of hand. Their grappling with the outside world may be hampered by all sorts of weakness and delusion, but if the Man, in his final desertion, is implicitly condemned, the Woman is left with a fragile dignity: 'Don't!' she demands of us in the closing lines, 'Don't laugh at me!'.

It's tricky to bring off the presentation of basically unsympathetic characters, especially when an audience may be all too ready to pre-judge the entanglement with social media and the level of self-delusion involved. But the two actors manage this skilfully; we may be appalled at sentiments expressed and deeds recounted, but the gaucheness of their initial encounter is excruciatingly entertaining, and the brief moments of outreach, even if insubstantial, reveal a blighted potential which seem to transform even the faces of the usually self-obsessed Man and Woman.

The staging, extremely straightforward and dependent mainly on switches of lighting to signify location and mood, makes it easy to pay attention to either character as required, while at the same time gesturing to the frenetic cycle of bars and dating sites lying behind this particular story.

To summarise, this year's Directors' Festival has revealed more excellent new talent and is a worthy successor to its predecessors.

Thursday, 8 August 2019

The Bridges of Madison County

by Marsha Norman (book) and Jason Robert Brown (music and lyrics)

seen at the Menier Chocolate Factory on 6 August 2019

Trevor Nunn directs this musical based on Robert James Waller's popular novel about an intense brief affair between Francesca (Jenna Russell) an Iowa farm housewife, originally from Naples, and Robert Kincaid (Edward Baker-Duly), a roving free-spirited photographer hired by National Geographic to photograph the celebrated covered wooden bridges of Madison County.

Robert calls at Francesca's home to ask the way to the elusive seventh bridge, on just the day when her husband and two fractious teenage children have departed for the Illinois State Fair. There is an immediate attraction; one thing leads quickly to another; but, at the last, Francesca's family loyalty prevents her from leaving with Robert. By the time, years later, that she might consider herself free - widowed and her children fully grown and establishes - it is too late; the older Robert has died.

Wednesday, 7 August 2019

2019 Directors' Festival 1 and 2

seen at the Orange Tree Theatre on 5 August 2019

The Orange Tree Theatre, in partnership with St Mary's University Twickenham, is presenting four short plays directed by graduates of the MA program developed by the two institutions, in the third year of their partnership.

1. Sadness and Joy in the Life of Giraffes by Tiago Rodrigues, translated by Mark O'Thomas and directed by Wiebke Green

This play, set in Lisbon, is one of many resenting an articulate child coming to terms with deep distress, in this case the death of her mother. The girl, played with enormous verve and charm by Eve Ponsonby, is explaining to us the meaning of words while preparing a school project about giraffes - Giraffe also appears to be her nickname, though her father (Gyuri Sarossy) is just as likely to call her Princess. Life is becoming difficult with father and daughter alone after the mother's death - she was evidently the provider in the family, ad now the bills are mounting up and the Discovery Channel has been disconnected. Giraffe embarks on a quest to find sufficient funds for a lifelong subscription to the Discovery Channel, aided by her trusty teddy bear Judy Garland, played with foul-mouthed insouciance by Nathan Walsh (he doesn't really like the name Judy Garland).

This sort of thing could too easily descend into sentimental whimsy; here under the capable hands of Wiebke Green and her versatile cast (Gyuri Sarossy also plays all the men Giraffe meets on her quest) the pitfalls are avoided and the story maintains the necessary balance between high-spirited comedy and uneasy poignancy. The conceit of a child articulating her occasionally wayward understanding of the world by imitating dictionary definitions is beautifully handled as a means of providing the narrative background, while still giving the audience some work to do to understand the situation.

All in all, an intriguing piece of work skilfully fitted to the Orange Tree Theatre stage.

2. Pilgrims by Elinor Cook directed by Ellie Goodall

Will (Nicholas Armfield) and Dan (Luke MacGregor) are friends who go mountaineering; Rachel (Adeyinka Akinrinade) has spent time with each of them, Dan latterly, before they set off on a challenge in Peru which is beyond their strength and skill. In a series of scenes announced by Rachel, who seems to be pushing against the stereotype of male adventuring and female patience (exemplified by the Odysseus and Penelope myth which she explicitly invokes at one stage) we gain an insight into the tangled relationships of the three characters; the exhilaration of the boys at their first experience of climbing as teenagers is all too easily transformed over the years into a defence against confronting deeper insecurities and challenges to mature.

The play is not always successful in keeping track of its many strands, so that the final image of Rachel donning a backpack as her 'man' waves goodbye, a reversal of the more typical gender roles, is both rather too neat and yet not well integrated into the young men's story. However, the cast perform well, negotiating the scrambled chronology of the narrative structure with ease and skill. Ellie Goodall and the Festival's stage management team evoked exposed mountaintops, natural beauty spots, nightclubs and domestic scenes with just a few boxes and pieces of wood, which were extremely effective in the intimate space of the theatre.

The play, perhaps, had bitten off more than it can chew, but the cast and director had not: their work was excellent.

Saturday, 3 August 2019

A Midsummer Night's Dream

by William Shakespeare

seen at Shakespeare's Globe on 1 August 2019

Sean Holmes directs Peter Bourke as Thesues and Oberon, Victoria Elliott as Hippolita and Titania, and Jocelyn Jee Esien as Bottom, with Ciarán O'Brien as Demetrius, Amanda Wilkin as Helena, Faith Omole as Hermia, Ekow Quartey as Lysander, Billy Seymour as Flute and Mustardseed, Jacoba Williams as Snout and Moth, Rachel Hannah Clark as Snug and Peaseblossom, and Nadine Higgins as Quince, Egeus and Cobweb, in an exuberant production designed by Jean Chan including explosions of riotous colour in the fairy sequences.

Friday, 2 August 2019

Present Laughter

by Noel Coward

seen at the Old Vic on 31 July 2019

Matthew Warchus directs Andrew Scott as Garry Essendine with Indira Varma as his estranged wife Liz and Sophie Thompson as his personal assistant Monica, with others supporting, in this revival (designed by Rob Howell) of Noel Coward's skewering comedy about theatrical celebrity first seen in the 1940s.

The set, in bright pastels, looks like a demented cross between a swank flat (where it is supposed to be) and an art deco cinema or theatre foyer, emphasising the fact that Garry Essendine lives on his celebrity status. Five entrances allow for a truly farcical set-up as people emerge from or are hidden in various rooms of the flat, or arrive at its front door, as the plot requires; but, typical of Coward, it is all very knowing, and one character complains (over the telephone) of being in a French farce. This calling the audience's attention to the mechanics of what they are witnessing is  high-risk strategy, but Noel Coward, at the peak of his powers, can pull it off, providing the cast rises to the occasion. This cast does, in splendid form.