Showing posts with label theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theatre. Show all posts

Friday, 19 October 2018

Review: Measure for Measure, Donmar Warehouse

While others strive for power, one Duke appears to be giving it away. Relinquishing his judicial power and assigning it to his deputy, he dons a monk's habit and steps back, to see what will unfold in his absence...

What does unfold is a staging of Measure for Measure quite unlike any that has been envisaged before. Though it is performed far less frequently than some of Shakespeare's other plays, Measure showcases an array of human vices which have become ever more important to address. Abuse of power, blackmail and hypocrisy, gender inequality and sexual violation - one instance of many in which a 16th century playwright appears to be speaking directly to us in the 21st century.


Sunday, 19 August 2018

Review: Apollo Theatre, Everybody's Talking About Jamie

Out of the darkness and over the wall, Jamie's stepping out into the spotlight - in a glamorous pair of glossy red high heels...

Jamie New steps into the spotlight at an exciting time for theatre - a time which sees an inspiring array of representation, from race to sexuality to gender. At the live screening of Everybody's Talking About Jamie, my expectations of this award-winning production were met, and surpassed. Seeing it live at the Apollo Theatre on London's West End had me falling for it all over again. This is a joyous production filled to the brim with humour, emotion, and strong moral messages. Here's my thoughts.



Wednesday, 15 August 2018

Review: The Merry Wives of Windsor, RSC

There's a knock at the door. A letter has arrived for a certain 'Mr Shakespeare', and it's from the Queen of England...

It feels like a long time since the Royal Shakespeare Company have performed a Shakespearean comedy, and so the current production of The Merry Wives of Windsor was a much needed breather from the darkness of Scottish moors and the tombs of ill-fated lovers. As with their recent productions of Macbeth and Romeo and Juliet, the play, its set and costumes, were modernised to add a 21st century relevance, but here, the worlds of Elizabethan bawdiness and Essex gaudiness came together in a fantastically farcical blend. Here's my thoughts. 


Tuesday, 14 August 2018

Review: National Theatre, Translations

In the midst of a clash between languages, Sarah has yet to conquer the power of speech...

Fascinated with traditional languages and cultures, I was drawn to see Brian Friel's Translations at the National Theatre. The play begins in a 'hedge-school' in County Donegal, where tutor Manus is encouraging Sarah, a mute, to pronounce her own name. This is a poignant starting place for a play which sees the native Irish tongue being displaced by English, an operation which threats the language and identity of its central characters. Yet despite this, Sarah is not the focus of the play, and is swiftly pushed to the peripheries as a detachment of English soldiers barge onto the scene. From the very beginning, things begin to slip away, an erosion which continues until the final scene. Here's my thoughts. 



Monday, 9 July 2018

Review: New Alexandra Theatre, Birdsong

As the chaplain delivers his final sermon, men of all ranks and stations take their positions: line-abreast; to ladders, to death...

I first saw the stage adaptation of Sebastian Faulks' novel Birdsong in 2013. Five years ago: before I had studied much about the First World War, or war literature; before the 100 years centenary had begun, with all its acts of remembrance. Seeing Birdsong again in 2018 offered not only a chance to see how the production had evolved, but how my perception of it had altered with all that I had learned and experienced over the past years - these poignant years of memorial. Here's my thoughts.



Saturday, 23 June 2018

Shakespeare Sunday: The Merchant of Venice

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract from one of the plays and write my thoughts.

'All that glitters is not gold' - The Merchant of Venice, Act 2 Scene 7
External versus Internal: Tolkien & Shakespeare


Wednesday, 20 June 2018

Review: RSC, Romeo and Juliet

A chorus of voices clamour to be heard, their cries becoming 140-character-length statements, loaded with meaning but exclaimed nevertheless...

There was much anticipation for the RSC's 2018 production of Romeo and Juliet, which promised a fresh, modern retelling by a youthful cast. Yet with the Globe's abstract 2017 production still fresh in people's minds, and with the RSC's recent Macbeth pushing modernisation to inaccessible levels, audiences could have been apprehensive about how the production would be handled. But under Erica Whyman's experienced direction and Tom Piper's acclaimed design, the production excelled. Here's my thoughts. 




Wednesday, 16 May 2018

Comment: The Stage, Protecting Shakespeare

The first in a new (non-regular) feature! This was spurred by an article in The Stage by associate editor Lyn Gardner, which I found tremendously valuable and would like to share. My thoughts below.

Lyn Gardner: Chekhov and Shakespeare do not need ‘protecting’




Monday, 14 May 2018

Review: RSC, The Duchess of Malfi

Once, twice, she stumbles - letting the rope in her hands go slack, a pitiful whimper to escape her lips. Yet, mustering her strength, she keeps going, dragging the heavy carcass onto the stage...

Recently, I've seen some really enlightening productions of Renaissance drama, where the story and characters have been transposed to a modern setting. Such modernisation can be a risk, but it is also essential to keep the intrigue and influence of theatre alive. The work of Shakespeare and his contemporaries is often as powerful, problematic and provocative to a modern audience as it was at the time it was written, but sometimes with traditional costumes and sets, the themes lessen or lose their impact. In stylising John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi in a 21st century world, the Royal Shakespeare Company reminds audiences of theatre's ability to impact and unsettle. Here's my thoughts.



Friday, 11 May 2018

Review: National Theatre, Macbeth

In a bleak, post-apocalyptic landscape, the king's militia brutally decapitate an enemy fighter, hanging his head in a plastic bag upon a pylon... 

As with the RSC's recent production of Macbeth, the reviews for the National Theatre's rendition of the Scottish Play were less than praising. Criticised for misjudging the play's themes and glorifying its violence in a 'Mad Max'-style setting, the production has been cited as one in a long line of flops from the National Theatre under artistic director Rufus Norris. Yet, as with the RSC production, I sat down for the live screening with an open mind - and was pleasantly surprised. Here's my thoughts.


Monday, 16 April 2018

Review: RSC, Macbeth

The old king sleeps. At the foot of his bed, three childish spectres keep their watch...

I was apprehensive to see the RSC's 2018 production of Shakespeare's Macbeth. The reviews were rather poor, with comments circulating that the production was unclear, disjointed, and inaccessible. However, being a strong supporter of the RSC and an open-minded theatre-goer, I entered the auditorium with the same level of interest and excitement as for any other production. Here's my thoughts.



Wednesday, 4 April 2018

Review: Royal Exchange, Frankenstein

The decks creak and the hull moans. With his ship stranded in the ice, Captain Walton begins a letter to his sister... 

Though I do love the Bard, it is refreshing to sometimes see a non-Shakespearean production. While I was familiar with the concept of Frankenstein, I knew little about the story itself, so to see it brought to life (or should I say, 'reanimated'?) on the stage, filled me with an intriguing mix of excitement and unease. Here's my thoughts. 


Tuesday, 28 November 2017

Review: Bridge Theatre, Young Marx

The year is 1850, and amongst the ramshackle streets of Soho, a desperate man heads to the pawnbrokers with his wife's family silver tucked under his arm...

So begins Young Marx, the debut production at the new Bridge Theatre on London's South Bank. For me, the play was an unexpected delight - not the dry, inaccessible political lecture I feared it might be, but a playful, upbeat comedy highlighting the all-too-human flaws and failings of one man, now known as the greatest intellectual revolutionary of his age. Here's my thoughts.


Sunday, 26 November 2017

Shakespeare Sunday: Richard III

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract from one of the plays and write my thoughts. 

'Teach me how to curse...' Richard III Act 4, Scene 4

Crippled Queens: Hurting or Helping?



Monday, 20 November 2017

Shakespeare Sunday: Macbeth

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract from one of the plays and write my thoughts.

'Hecate, Hecate, come away' Macbeth, Act 3 Scene 5

Middleton's Additions: Worth a Second Look?



Tuesday, 14 November 2017

Review: Alarum Theatre, Idle Women

While we remember the men who fought to keep our country safe, let us also spare a thought for the women who toiled to keep it running... 

It's been a few weeks since I saw Idle Women of the Wartime Waterways, but now, during this time of remembrance, it is as apt a time as any to review this heart-warming show of courage and perseverance. 


Sunday, 12 November 2017

Shakespeare Sunday: King Lear and Henry V

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract from one of the plays and write my thoughts. 

'Why, this is an arrant counterfeit rascal...' Henry V Act 3 Scene 6

Bawcock or Heart of Gold? Comparing Kent/Caius and Pistol


Sunday, 5 November 2017

Shakespeare Sunday: Much Ado About Nothing

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract of one of the plays, and write my thoughts. 

'She would infect to the north star' Much Ado About Nothing, Act 2, Scene 1

Bullying and The Hostile Environment 

Sunday, 29 October 2017

Shakespeare Sunday: Coriolanus

Welcome to 'Shakespeare Sunday', where I take an extract from one of the plays, and write my thoughts. 


'Some parcels of their power are forth already' Coriolanus, Act 1, Scene 2

Rome: Superpower in the Making