Very occasionally the Donmar gets things completely wrong and unfortunately The Prince of Homburg is a prime example. The play is unfamiliar so it's impossible to say if it's because of von Kleist's confused scenario or Dennis Kelly's clumsy adaptation. The motivations of the two leading protagonists are constantly shifting in contrary directions and are not helped by performances from Ian McDiarmid and Charlie Cox which do nothing to suggest that either would inspite blind loyalty or a potential mutiny. Worst of all, Kelly has apparently completely changed the ending. This might make slightly more dramatic sense, particularly given the heavy-handed comparisons with Hitler's Reich, but it is not the play von Kleist wrote. It's like Othello having a moment of clarity and turning in Iago instead of Desdemona - interesting but not Shakespeare. Perhaps Michael Grandage has been distracted by his directing duties at the National because this has been a mixed year for the Donmar so far, a victim of almost impossibly high expectations. - David Baxter
28 Aug 10
Less than half the c.50 plays I’ve seen in London this year have been new (I can’t wait for Edinburgh to restore the balance). Of the revivals many were definitely worth reviving – from Shakespeare (the Almeida’s Measure for Measure and A Midsummer Night’s Dream at The Rose in Kingston) through Miller (The Open Air’s Crucible and All My Sons in the West End) to The Beauty Queen of Leenane just last Saturday at the Young Vic…..but I would question whether both the Buckner at the NT on Friday and this last night at the Donmar deserve it.
This early 19th century German play centres on a dreamy young prince who becomes a war hero but because he doesn’t strictly follow his orders finds himself in deep trouble. By the interval, though it had held my attention, I was thinking ‘so?’. The second half was much better as the debate about his reasons and the rights and wrongs unfolds. It’ OK, but just OK, and not in my view good enough to see it replace better revivals or new work from the London stage. Simply but elegantly staged and well acted, it’s hard to fault the production but hard to justify all the effort. - Gareth James