Katy Stephens' hair: As You Like It (The Courtyard Theatre, 12th August 2009)

What is it like seeing a production as it has started to bed down and well into its run.  I’ve seen the RSC’s As You Like It five times now.  Once very early in its run in May and then in July when Mariah Gale was playing Rosalind. I think the production has matured, just as I think The Winter’s Tale has really improved as the actors settle into the roles.  In the RSC’s As You Like It, the world of Arden is cold, bitter and harsh.  This is a contrast to the Arden in the current Shakespeare’s Globe production.  The Globe production is probably more joyous then the RSC production and Arden is a much nicer place.  Certainly in the RSC production there is more of a sense of the ‘churlish chiding of the winter wind (II.i.6).  I like these contrasts as I like to see different interpretations of Shakespeare’s text and sometimes, an experiment might not work, which I think as an audience you can sometimes accept. 

Another difference between the Globe  and the RSC productions is how Rosalind wears her hair, which I know has been a talking point for some people.   One experiment in the current RSC production was for Rosalind to let her hair down rather than cut it short or hide it under a hat when she becomes Ganymede.  As Rosalind becomes more established and more confident in the forest, her hair becomes messier and unrestrained.  It was a bold decision to play Rosalind this way, and I think on this occasion it worked.  I thought that the whole idea behind this production was to show a contrast between the formal court which was full of ritual, straight lines and dress that confines people, to a forest where dress can become timeless and unbuttoned.  In the court, members of the court danced in unison, in the forest they danced in circles, clothes changes style and became relevant to no place than a particular time in history, and hair was not styled.   The closer Rosalind got to Orlando particularly in the Ganymede/Orlando wooing scenes, Rosalind’s hair strayed across her face.  Katy Stephens is a Rosalind who is at times uncomfortable dressing as a boy.  She is impatient to unmask herself and be female again, and there is one point where she triess to take off her trousers and disgard the male clothes.  Mariah Gale’s Celia attempts to maintain the disguise and not let Rosalind reveal her gender until it feels safe in the forest to do so.

At the end of the RSC production, Katy Stephens’ Rosalind appears for her wedding scene and her hair has been dressed for it.  She’s not back in the formal Elizabethan/Jacobean dress, but in a white dress, trimmed with flowers as if to signal, even though she is now back as a woman , she will not be returning yet to the stiff formality of the court.  Yes she’s the heir to the dukedom with the hair to express this.

 Further Information

Further Information on the RSC Web Site

Production Photographs on the RSC Facebook site

As You Like It (The Courtyard, 2nd July 2009)

This is becoming the As You Like It summer. I’ve already blogged about the Curve production, RSC production, and the Globe production, but felt that I had make mention of the RSC one again after seeing Mariah Gale go on as understudy for Rosalind. On this occasion, there were no press releases or reports of fans demanding their money back. Indeed Gale is an established actress playing some of Shakespeare’s lead women – Miranda, Ophelia and Celia. I felt Gale did a fantastic job and it was really strange watching her playing the other half of the Celia/Rosalind partnership. I was amazed the costumes fitted her, as I understand that the understudies do not have their own costumes. Lines about Celia being smaller than Rosalind were funny because of the switch and Gale made comment in her prologue that it was unusual to see the part of Rosalind played by the understudy. I liked Katy Stephens in the role, but it was refreshing to see Gale have a go at it. it’s also nice to see Gale playing the comedy, as Ophelia is such an intense and difficult role to play and both the Princess of France and Celia are not big parts.

As You Like It (The Globe, 13th June 2009)

As I am reviewing lots of different productions of the same play, I thought I would make some comments on watching different versions of the same plays close together. Recently, two The Winter’s Tale and hopefully it’ll be the Jude Law Hamlet in a few weeks following hotly on from that Tennant Hamlet. Last year it was a Globe and RSC version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and this year it is the RSC version and The Globe productions of As You Like It. These productions follow the Tim Supple production at the Leicester Curve which Miching Malicho blogged about in March.

It is actually very exciting to see two productions of the same play very close together. For example, the Old Vic (Bridge Project) and RSC’s The Winter’s Tales are so very different presenting such different readings of the text. Actually seeing them together is makes you really think about the play and the different perspectives being presented rather than being persuaded to accept one creative team’s take on the play as the only reading.

As I watched As You Like It, I still had in mind the RSC version which I saw a few week’s ago. When the cast came on stage in formal dress, there was a clear link here, but from then on the productions were so different. The RSC’s version moves through time and ends up as a modern version; the Globe’s version stays very much in the Elizabethan/Jacobean contemporary setting. The Globe production doesn’t dwell on the darkness of the play, except for a moment when Oliver has clearly been tortured by Duke Frederick. It’s really good fun. Touchstone (Dominic Rowan) is clearly the fool in the court, but in the woods he is able to find his self away from the two women he flees the court with. The dance at the end brings four couples together and there is a sense of satisfaction that all is well though we know that Jacques has gone to live with Duke Frederick in the ‘abandoned cave’. When things might get desperate and Orlando threatens Duke Senior’s court to try and get food for Adam, his actions are undermined by Jacques who thrusts an apple onto the sword. We never think that Orlando was in danger when Oliver brings in the blood stained scarf and the only danger we are confronted with is a goat appearing out of the trap, who becomes the focus of some ‘he’s behind you’ moments.

The Globe stage had been extended for this production and, for me, there were some issues with viewpoints. We had supposedly good seats but when characters delivered speeches from the back of the Groundlings they were sometimes difficult to hear and we couldn’t be seen. I like this use of spaces, but as in any space, I feel that it is important to make sure that as many people in the audience can see and hear.

We see a real transformation in characters and the journey they take in the Forest of Arden. Of course Rosalind (Naomi Frederick) becomes a boy, but other transformations are also highlighted in this production. For example, Celia (Laura Rogers) starts the play off dressed regally like Queen Elizabeth and becomes a bit like Miranda Richardson’s ‘whose Queen’ in the second series of Blackadder. She is clearly favoured by her father, and so when she runs away we feel that she has probably made the bravest decision of all the characters. Jack Lasky’s Orlando starts as an angry frustrated and bitter man, not knowing what to do in his brother’s house after their father’s death and becomes a passionate lover in the woods and his dance at the end was as if he was still in character and enjoying and feeling every move.

Rosalind presents the epilogue at the end of the play and lifts her dress to reveal her breeches to remind us that on the Globe stage it was the men who played the women and Rosalind would have been played by a boy actor. Earlier in the play, Orlando is pleasantly surprised at how much he is delighted by Gannymeade’s kiss and you felt that he would have been content if Rosalind continued to be Gannymeade.

The dance at the end of the Globe production is ‘feel good’ in spirit and the production is a ‘feel good’ production. In three months, I have seen the darkness of the play represented in Supple’s version, a sense of surrealism represented in Michael Boyd’s RSC production and the sense of a play that is an escape into the woods and from the restraints of the court (everyday life) at The Globe.

Previews and Reviews

The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
As You Like It, Globe (Independent Review)
Evening Standard Review of the Globe As You Like It
WOS review of As You Like It (Globe)
As You Like It, Globe
The Guardian review of As You Like It
The Globe As You Like It in the Financial Times
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
As You Like It, Globe (Telegraph Review)

The Winter's Tale and As You Like It (RSC 7th, 8th and 9th May 2009)

On the cover of the programme for current RSC production of The Winter’s Tale , Greg Hicks (Leontes) stands in the middle of a winter landscape and glances down at an ‘old master’ painting depicting an idyllic classical landscape. The programme image suggests the pastoral world as an alternative to the world that Leontes inhabits. It also suggests an escape from the monochrome world where the road goes nowhere. The contrast between the masculine dominated sphere of the court is also contrasted in As You Like It with the exterior world of the Forest of Arden. In both plays this alternative world is inhabited by those that play god and goddesses, shepherds and shepherdesses, lovers and the loved – the winter world by those who play the brutal ruler. Yet, the alternative is still full of jealousies, thieves, wild animals, the threat of betrayal and a need to survive. In considering these two plays together it is possible to make meanings out of the viewing both productions now being performed at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford upon Avon.

I’m sure that when the RSC have decided to put As You Like It and The Winter’s Tale into the schedules together, they did so because there are clear parallels between of the themes and ideas in both plays.

The plays deal with a transition from court into a pastoral world. It is a movement from the interior to the exterior. The male rulers’ tirades destroy all around him. The family is split apart and the domestic work is transformed into a dystopia. Fathers and daughters are separated. Brothers are set against brothers with echoes of the ‘primal eldest’ curse also explored in Hamlet, but in these two plays there is forgiveness and reconciliation. It is forgiveness and reconciliation which makes these two plays and these productions of them so powerful.

It would make sense, with an ensemble company working together for two years, to explore some of the links between the two plays in the two productions. However, this is not necessarily the case, because the ensemble has been split into two companies to work on the two plays and have different directors – Michael Boyd for As You Like It and David Farr for The Winter’s Tale. So while in some cases the audience, who are often likely to visit both, may make their own links between the two productions there are differences in creative decisions and approaches as well.

Both sets give the impression of timeless worlds that could be anywhere (like the set of Twelfth Night in the Theatre Royal, York production see earlier blog entry). The sets represent the disintegration of society and at points reflect the state of characters’ minds. As the plays progress the structures they inhabit start to fall apart. The Winter’s Tale opens in the library, and the audience is reminded of learning and wisdom, which should be about being rationale and common sense. The play starts with a formal dinner party, but as the relationships between the characters break down the set falls apart as the play progresses. There is a surprise which Miching Malicho won’t spoil in this blog. There is a similar effect as the set transforms through As You Like it, and the Court of Duke Frederick (Sandy Neilson) feels clinical and cold. When the audience enter the Courtyard Theatre they are faced with a tiled backdrop and stage floor The cast entering doing a formal dance in stiff Elizabethan costumes. As As You Like It progresses the set opens up as the characters open up their minds and traps in the floor and the tiles in the back of the set open. In The Winter’s Tale the traps and flies are used to great effect particularly in the second half.

Corin (Geoffrey Freshwater) skinning his rabbit on stage as the audience return from the interval break is a reminder of the violence and brutality that is present in the two plays. Hermione (Kelly Hunter) stands with her dress stained by the blood of birth as she is accused by husband in the trial scene. Servants enter Duke Frederick’s court with blood on their faces, clearly beaten for hiding the departure e of Celia and Rosalind. The Duke keeps a wrestler so he can inflict pain on others and the fight between Charles (David Carr) and Orlando (JonJo O’Neill) is a savage affair.

The response of characters to this abuse is not always passive. Herminoe is angry as she defends herself in her trial and Paulina (Noma Dumezweni) shows fury at the way the queen has been treated. There is so much humanity in the plays to counteract the turbulence. In As You Like It, Orlando will look after the old servant Adam (Peter Shorey) at all costs, protecting him like a child. He enters the stage carrying him just as Jacques finishes the ‘Seven ages of Man’ speech becoming a visual reminder of age. In The Winter’s Tale, Hermione is really content in her pregnancy and she delights in her young son as he tells his ‘sad tale for winter’. There is a strong bond between Rosalind (Katy Stephens) and Celia (Mariah Gale). Rosalind transforms herself into a boy by stripping off the formality represented by the black dress and letting her hair down. The thinly drawn moustache seems to emphasise her femininity and reminds us that she is just playing a man and is a woman. She is the one that leads in the woods, and draws Celia around in the handcart supporting her cousin. Touchstone maakes us laugh as he takes Celia’s place in the cart to be dragged off stage via the traverse by an unknowing Rosalind.

After all, As You Like It is a comedy and though a tragedy in the first part The Winter’s Tale becomes a comedy in the second part. Orlando has wooed Rosalind with the verses strewn across the audience and on the roads outside the theatre. The audience have been invited to write more as part of a RSC competition. They are invited into the marriage feast at the end of As You Like It as ribbons are presented to audience members. The production has moved through time and we are now up to date. In The Winter’s Tale the marriage of Perdita and Florizel bring young love back to the decaying court of Sicilia.

Hermione’s statue is ashen white bathed in light. On her face are the lines of time and as she comes back to life it feels as if she thaws and melts into her human form. it is a very moving scene watched by the audience through the eyes of the mesmerized courtiers and royal family on stage.

Both RSC productions take the audience through space and time. As time passes and the performances develop, the structure of the theatre will change on the move to Newcastle in the autumn, so I would be interested to see how these two productions will mature and transform as the ensemble get to know each other better and maybe utilise the connections between the two plays even further.

 

Production Details

 

 
Production Photographs
 
As You Like It (On theRSC’s Facebook Site)
The Winter’s Tale (On the RSC’s Facebook Site)
 
Reviews and Previews
As You Like It
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
Theatre review: As You Like It / Curve, Leicest…
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
As You Like It
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
Review: As You Like It
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
As You Like It at Curve, Leicester – Times Online
As You Like It at Courtyard, Stratford – Times …
As You Like It at Courtyard, Stratford – Times …
As You Like It: All the world’s a politically c…
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
Company gets lost in As You Like It Theatre …
Theatre preview of 2009 – Telegraph
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – As You Like I…
The Stage / Reviews / As You Like It
As You Like It at the Courtyard, Stratford-upon…
As You Like It, review – Telegraph
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
Royal Shakespeare Company : Press releases
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
As You Like It, Courtyard, Stratford-upon-Avon …
As You Like It at The Curve, Leicester – Times …
As you like wit! Mail Online
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
The Stage / Shenton’s View / Tweeting and quote…
Burnt by the Sun, NT Lyttelton, London
Danci…

The Stage / Reviews / As You Like It
Birmingham Post – Life & Leisure – Birmingham C…
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
There’s much to like about As You Like It Met…
FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – As You Like I…
The Leamington Observer – Lot to like from Step…
The Winter’s Tale
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
Theatre review: As You Like It / Curve, Leicest…
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
As You Like It
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
Review: As You Like It
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
As You Like It at Curve, Leicester – Times Online
As You Like It at Courtyard, Stratford – Times …
As You Like It at Courtyard, Stratford – Times …
As You Like It: All the world’s a politically c…
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
Company gets lost in As You Like It Theatre …
Theatre preview of 2009 – Telegraph
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – As You Like I…
The Stage / Reviews / As You Like It
As You Like It at the Courtyard, Stratford-upon…
As You Like It, review – Telegraph
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
Royal Shakespeare Company : Press releases
As You Like It: Royal Shakespeare Company, Cour…
As You Like It, Courtyard, Stratford-upon-Avon …
As You Like It at The Curve, Leicester – Times …
As you like wit! Mail Online
Katy Stephens On … Life at the RSC Post-Histori…
The Stage / Shenton’s View / Tweeting and quote…
Burnt by the Sun, NT Lyttelton, London
Danci…

The Stage / Reviews / As You Like It
Birmingham Post – Life & Leisure – Birmingham C…
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
There’s much to like about As You Like It Met…
FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – As You Like I…
The Leamington Observer – Lot to like from Step…

As You Like It (The Curve, 21st March 2009)

I thought that Tim Supple’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream was an amazing piece of theatre, and this is why I booked for As You Like It at the Leicester Curve. The cast created some really interesting readings of the play and there was some very thought provoking moments. However, this was a very different production from the Dream. It was very earthy and the wooden stage was dismantled as the production progressed to reveal the wood chip ground of the forest. The floorboards become the trees in the Forest which is a very dark place. As the stage was steeply raked, it felt like the actors were playing on a bank or even on a hillside.

The Dream really moved into an alternative world, where the two worlds in Supple’s As You Like It merged into each other and were very similar. Supple’s production is brown and ochre it is raw and thoughtful. In the past when I have seen productions of As You Like It, I consider them to be like Alice in Wonderland in the that the play depicts a mirror world. I usually feel a real sense of characters moving through the looking glass. In this production, I felt that the characters just move to a different scene when they go into the woods. The world of the court seemed to merge into the world of the woods. It didn’t feel as if there had been a dramatic transformation, just a gradual transformation. That’s probably why I felt that Supple’s As You Like It was so different from his Dream.

This year, there will be the RSC and Globe versions of As You Like It to compare. it will be interesting to see how different the approaches will be, if different at all.

Information about the Production

http://www.curveonline.co.uk/curve.php?pgid=25

Reviews and Previews

FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – As You Like I…
As You Like It at Curve, Leicester – Times Online
Theatre review: As You Like It / Curve, Leicest
The Stage / Reviews / As You Like It
As You Like It at The Curve, Leicester – Times …
As You Like It: All the world’s a politically c…
Review: As You Like It
There’s much to like about As You Like It Met…