Venue:
Lyric Theatre Hammersmith Where: Outer London
Date Reviewed:
7 November 2008 WOS Rating: Average Reader Rating: Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews Black Watch admirers will remember the squaddies materialising through a pool table and riding on it as a truck through Basra. Well, the table’s back, and the movement director Steven Hoggett , re-united in harness with his Frantic Assembly co-director, Scott Graham , places it centre stage once more: their frantically assembled Othello is set in a pub in West Yorkshire where their main man seduces the barmaid. By the time we reach the opening line of the play (“Tush, never tell me”) we’ve had more bar room follies than a night at the Vauxhall Tavern, only not quite so camp. This haven of hoodies, hot pants and cheap stripey wallpaper has a flashing fruit machine where Jimmy Akingbola ’s shaven-haired (with a Mohican brush), street-fighting Othello punches out his frustrations when he’s not punching out other people’s faces.
As the leader of a Turk-bashing gang, you can just about see how this muscular, glowering African Yorkshireman might be a plausible leader of racist thugs, but it’s quite a stretch. Everything Frantic Assembly does in the show ranges from good to brilliant as long as it’s not too much Shakespeare. Out the window goes statesmanship, along with sea-going travels among the cannibals and anthropophagi; Desdemona chalks Othello’s cue for the simplicity of his appeal and swaggering.
The pool table is their marriage bed, their work-out space, the focus of Cassio’s drunken distraction as Iago tightens the snare and the scene of the main crime. Claire-Louise Cordwell ’s coarse and flagrant Desdemona prepares for her nemesis in the lavatory, smoking a joint with Leila Crerar ’s increasingly hysterical, horrible Emilia.
The action is underpinned by the constant, throbbing soundtrack of Hybrid’s electronic dance music which erupts portentously to match the story line and fuels the big dance and fight sequences that are the show’s main glory. The climactic trajectory of the verse and the great fifth act speeches are obstacles to be surmounted by the physical gesture of a reverse strangulation on the green baize.
Charles Aitken ’s Iago is a forceful presence, making his campaign of “wife for wife” totally clear, driven by misconstrued jealousy, while Jami Reid-Quarrell ’s Cassio and Richard James-Neale ’s Roderigo have their moments. Designer Laura Hopkins ’ restrictive boozer has a wonderful ability to contract and fold like a concertina for the few outdoors scenes.
- Michael Coveney
Related Content
Free Newsletter
Subscribe to our free newsletter
Featured Editor's Picks
Infographic : The economic impact of Arts & Culture in the UK When Culture Secretary Maria Miller called for the arts to make their "economic case" for subsidy, t...Plays Cast: Harry Potter star in Southwark Moment , more for Branagh's Macbeth Bonnie Wright, best known for playing Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter films, will make her stage d...Brief Encounter with ... The Kite Runner's Ben Turner Ben Turner stars in the stage version of the bestselling book The Kite Runner, which runs at Liverpo...Titus Andronicus (RSC) This latest production of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, to borrow from football punditry, is a p...Take Five : Britain's outdoor theatres With half-term approaching, the weather (hopefully) set to improve for the bank holiday weekend and ...West End Live returns to Trafalgar Square next month West End Live, a weekend of free entertainment from top London shows, will return to Trafalgar Squar...Robert Sean Leonard : 'I carry the ghost of Gregory Peck on my shoulders' Actor Robert Sean Leonard is currently playing Atticus Finch in Timothy Sheader's production of To K...To Kill A Mockingbird Twenty years ago, a young Robert Sean Leonard appeared on the London stage with Alan Alda in...X Factor musical titled I Can't Sing! , opens Palladium March 2014 The forthcoming X Factor musical will be called I Can't Sing! The Musical and will premiere at the L...Donmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...