Showing posts with label Olivia Vinall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivia Vinall. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 August 2016

Young Chekhov

Platonov, Ivanov and The Seagull reversioned by David Hare

seen at the National Theatre (Olivier) on 13 August 2016

Anton Chekhov's three early plays - the first of which was not performed in his lifetime - were presented last year at the Chichester Festival as a unified insight into the dramatist's development. Most of the original cast have been reassembled to present the plays in London this summer. The three plays were directed by Jonathan Kent and the sets - variations on Russian country estates - were designed by Tom Pye.

In many ways the best way to appreciate this ambitious undertaking is to see all three plays on the same day. Patterns and themes emerge - there are references to Hamlet in each play; there is a significant part for a doctor in each play, though the three doctors are utterly different in style and personality; there is an idealistic but frustrated young man in each, colliding with an idealistic and frustrated young woman with painful consequences; surrounding the main characters are an assortment of hangers-on, older but not necessarily wiser relatives who are part of a wider and often stifling society. But the fascination of all this is that though the situations may appear similar in bald summary, the tone of each play, and the way the characters interact (or fail to interact) in each, makes for a wide and rich spectrum of human behaviour. Chekhov is revealed to be the master of social comedy and romantic melodrama just as much as his more well-known bittersweet examination of thwarted idealism and crippling ennui. 

Thursday, 2 April 2015

The Hard Problem

by Tom Stoppard

seen at the National Theatre (Dorfman) on 28 March 2015

Tom Stoppard's new play is directed by Nicholas Hytner (the retiring Artistic Director of the National Theatre) with Olivia Vinall as Hilary and Damien Molony as Spike. It is partly an examination of the 'hard problem' of the relation between consciousness and physics, with reflections on the questions of ethical goodness and the existence of God, and also on game theory as manifested in the machinations of the financial world.

The summary shows the grand themes jostling for attention in a single dramatic piece. Stoppard has an impressive track record in juxtaposing unexpected storylines to illustrate often abstruse philosophical questions while providing fizzing entertainment - see for example 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead', 'Jumpers', 'Travesties' and 'Arcadia'. Unfortunately this play is not one to add to the list.