Posted 03 September 2012 - 12:56 PM
I saw the matinee on 1 September, and it was very much a game of two halves for me. A really impressive first hour – highly pertinent modern setting, strong characters, slick direction, and memorable setpieces (particularly that second feast). You get to the interval and wonder why the play is so rarely staged. Then you come back for the second half, and its ‘problem’ status becomes all too explicable. The buried crock of gold has troubled many a director, I gather, and here they find no way to make it anything but the most risibly shoehorned McGuffin. And then Timon rails at the world and a succession of former friends for an hour or so. SRB tries to vary the tone with a bit of jazz-handing humour (there were touches of his last outing as Stalin), but even he can’t bring any real import or pathos to the guy’s downfall. And then it all just ends, without any gruesome deaths (there is an axe, but it’s never gainfully employed). Go for the first half, by all means – it’s worth the Travelex price for that alone – then go out and enjoy the rest of your evening.