King John (Temple Church, 10th and 17th April)

Mad world! mad kings! mad composition!

After seeing the Globe’s production of King John, two images came to mind. The first image is the Globe’s promotional video for its exhibition which shows an inquisitive Anjana Vasan entering the Globe and as she enters the place explodes with characters from the plays. In the video, if feels as if the figures have appeared from the walls of the theatre. The second image is from the current Savage Beauty exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum showing the model Kate Moss in an Alexander McQueen wedding dress appearing like a spectre from the darkness. The image of Moss is both beautiful and grotesque at the same time.

When watching the Globe’s production of King John, the light in the enormously beautiful Temple Church shone across the walls turning the stone to gold, and in the shadows characters emerged from the corners of the church. Indeed, as characters entered from the West, they could be heard speaking and then they started to appear out of the darkness. The acoustics gave the speech an eerie echoing sound. In the second half, as it was dark outside, this effect became even more prominent and at times it looked like characters floated across the stage.

As the light is faded outside the church, the production started in a murky light, but as it progressed and it became darker outside, the light inside became extremely bright. The light picked up the threads in the costumes, jewels and on crowns. The effect was to give a real feel for the transience of the power portrayed, and that we were watching the ephemeral characters passing through. The throne placed in front of the audience is lit by candles looking seductive in the light. Indeed, several characters sit on it as if drawn to it by a supernatural force. The photograph below of Alex Waldmann as the Bastard shows the effect of the candles on the throne.

The stage was a traverse stage that runs along the church and across both transepts in the shape of a cross. There’s something very uncomfortable about seeing attempted murder in a church; when Hubert tries to murder Arthur and again when Arthur slips to his death in the second half was particularly horrifying. There’s also something uncomfortable watching a war being enacted on a cross in a church. When as an audience member you’re so close to the action, it can be exciting to see swords flashing and the sounds of metal on metal as the battles rage around you.

This was site specific performance at its best. On the two occasions I went to see the production, there was a long queue outside before the doors opened. As we entered the space we passed monks who were singing and stood amongst the candlelit tombs. The pews were unreserved, and so it was about guessing which would be a good spot. On the second occasion that I went, I sat right at the end of the church near the throne and musicians and I found that a really good place to sit, with some great views of the action. The stage is very high, but the effect is that the characters move above you. It’s an interesting use of the space, so wherever you were sat you were presented with a very different experience.

For me it was the second half that was the most satisfying. As everything starts to fall apart for John, the music becomes haunting and there are screeches as John moves to excess undertaking another two coronations. The prophesy that John will die on ascension day keeps being repeated, and the whole atmosphere prepares us for John’s death. The combination of light and space creates the atmosphere of excess in seeing `John becoming more and more isolated as he crowns himself another two times. In the air there is a madness created through lift sound, the actors’ movement and the textures in the church itself.

There were some excellent moments in this production. For example, Tanya Moodie as Constance and Barbara Marten as Eleanor dressed as Monks, announce the deaths of their own characters. As the Pope’s envoy (Pandulph Joseph Marcell) persuades the two Kings to obey Rome, they hold, and we are waiting for the moment they disagree and drop hands. Alex Waldmann’s Bastard chides Giles Terera’s Austria knowing that he has killed his father, Richard the Lionheart and indeed gets his revenge by decapitating him and running in with the severed head in his hand like a trophy.

There was some outstanding performances from a very strong ensemble. Jo Stone-Fewings plays John with confidence. Barbara Marten, Aruhan Galieva and Tanya Moodie are fantastic as the women in a play where women are not afraid to speak. Alex Waldmann also gives a strong performance as the Bastard. The Bastard is a narrator, and connects the audience to the play, and Waldmann is able to engage the audience as he communicates with the different sides of the church.

I think the point was in this production that I was seeing representations of beings from the past that appeared before me and then disappeared. Well done James Dacre for directing a very even piece of work.

I did wonder if on a matinée with the summer sunshine whether the effects would be so good. I also wondered what it would be like in the Globe mainly playing to the front. We’ll see.

© Bronwen Sharp Alex Waldmann as the Bastard

Further Information

http://www.shakespearesglobe.com/m/whats-on/globe-theatre

Cast

Laurence Belcher Arthur, Simon Coates King Philip, Aruhan Galieva Blanche of Castile, Joseph Marcell Cardinal Pandulph, Barbara Marten Eleanor of Aquitaine, Mark Meadows Hubert, Tanya Moodie Constance, Ciaran Owens Louis the Dauphin, Daniel Rabin Salisbury, Jo Stone-Fewings King John, Giles Terera’s Austria, Alex Waldmann The Bastard, King Philip Aruhan Galieva Blanche of Castile, Joseph Marcell Cardinal Pandulph, Barbara Marten Eleanor of Aquitaine, Mark Meadows Hubert, Tanya Moodie Constance, Ciaran Owens Louis the Dauphin, Daniel Rabin Salisbury, Jo Stone-Fewings King John, Giles Terera Austria, Alex Waldmann The Bastard.

A Midsummer Night's Dream (Newby Hall, 19th August 2009)

Earlier this summer, I saw the Globe’s touring production of The Comedy of Errors and Sprite’s The Tempest  Watching the Globe’s touring production at Newby Hall near Ripon in North Yorkshire was very enjoyable.  We were lucky to get there about three quarters of an hour before it started to set up camp.  I think if we’d got there any later we would hav stuggled to get a decent spot. 

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is always good for a few laughs whatever the production and this production was extremely funny.  Like the Globe’s The Comedy of Errors, the doubling up was really interesting and actually changing characters and dress on stage worked really well.  Since Adrian Noble’s production, umbrellas in A Midsummer Night’s Dream is no longer a surprise, but fortunately the evenign we went they were only needed in the performance because it stayed fine all evening.

Review

Globe on Tour (Charles Spencer in the Telegraph)

Further Information

Information and booking details on the Shakespeare’s Globe web site

Troilus and Cressida (Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, 23rd July 2009)

It took me some time to get into Troilus and Cressida at the Globe Theatre. I haven’t seen a production for about 23 years and so it was nice to see a play that was fresh and where I needed to be reminded of the plot. Laura Pyper does a good job at playing the sparky Cressida and Mathew Kelly is excellent as Pandarus. I liked the red streaks in Pyper’s hair, they gave a real feel that Cressida wasn’t much different from teenagers today. Cressida is caught up in a nasty male game. Even though the play is set in Ancient Greece, it felt like we hadn’t really learnt anything all these years later. The second half moves at a much faster pace then the first. As Troilus and Cressida is rarely played, I was glad I saw this production. The druming at the end were stunning.

We sat on the wooden benches and had a really good view, but I felt so stiff at the end. Maybe I need to think about getting one of those cushions next time. During the performance we saw, at least three people suffered from the heat and had to be taken out from the groundlings and there was a downpour in the middle of the performance. That’s the Shakespeare’s Globe experience with the British weather.

Reviews and Previews

The Guardian on Troilus and Cressida
What’s On Stage review of Troilus and Cressida
What’s On Stage on Troilus and Cressida
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
Globe Troilus and Cressida – Kelly to star
The Stage on Troilus and Cressida at the Globe
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
The Telegraph on Troilus and Cressida
The Stage / News / Shakespeare’s Globe announce…
Young cast lead Young Hearts season at Globe …
Londonist review of Troilus and Cressida
Troilus and Cressida Evening Standard Review
Independent on Sunday on Troilus and Cressida and Black Album
Troilus and Cressida in the Independent

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)