Member Login | FREE TICKETS GALORE - JOIN THE THEATRE CLUB JUST £30
QUICK LINKS
NEWS  |  GOSSIP  |  REVIEWS  |  REVIEW ROUND-UPS  |  INTERVIEWS  |  FEATURES  |  PHOTOS  |  REGIONS

Hilton McRae as Pozdynshev
Hilton McRae as Pozdynshev
The Kreutzer Sonata
Venue: The Gate Theatre
Where: Inner London
Date Reviewed: 11 November 2009
WOS Rating: starstarstarstar
Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews

Tolstoy’s great “confession on a train” novella has been brilliantly adapted for the theatre by writer Nancy Harris and director Natalie Abrahami, cutting to the chase half way through the story when the town councillor Pozdynyshev turns to the audience (in the book, he turns to the narrator) in the railway compartment and confides that he’s not a music lover.

The show then exposes his engulfment by the dangerous tide of emotion unleashed by his wife’s performance at the piano of Beethoven’s Kreutzer Sonata, accompanying the violinist Trukhachevski, an old friend he has invited into the house of his failing marriage.

The mystery of music surrounding his surge of jealousy is quite amazingly well conveyed by Hilton McRae as the wife-abusing Pozdynshev, coming hard on the heels of his superb and equally well-observed television portrait of the alleged child-abuser Gary Glitter in a somewhat dubious television documentary drama with a similarly summary execution. One of life’s Iagos, McRae enters Othello territory, misconstruing an innocent letter, with a filigree performance of sly and insinuating smug nastiness.

Yet the genius of Tolstoy is to show a man who is trapped in his adherence to pompous misogyny by social conditioning and expectation. It’s not his fault that he is inexcusably like he is, or is it? He’s driven to murder but torn apart by the horror of his unlooked-for taste of sublimity in love and music, and is even tenderly solicitous over the corpse in the box.

Chloe Lamford’s design comprises the railway carriage - and carriage lamps in the auditorium - set slightly at an angle against a rippling, deliquescent backdrop where we see Sophie Scott as the unnamed (naturally) beautiful wife and Tobias Beer as the affable, portly Trukhachevski playing snippets in half-glimpsed sensual snapshots, a grand piano miraculously suspended in the middle distance, until the full flood of the Kreutzer Sonata breaks over the stage in Mark Howland’s suddenly full lighting.

It all makes for an absolutely riveting ninety minutes, with McRae giving the performance of his career and Abrahami’s production only slightly faltering when the music competes too forcibly for our attention with the words, and Ian William Galloway’s clever projections offer too much unnecessary and hard-to-decipher flesh-threshing.



- by Michael Coveney

Back to Off-West End Homepage





Write a Review
Give us your opinion on this production, give it a score (1 is low) and a comment
Score:
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.






Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


Friends Email: Your Email: Comment:
© Whatsonstage 1996-2009
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Tickets Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Theatregoers' Choice Awards
Theatre Club

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds

Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0845 372 1950
For Outings or Club queries: 020 7317 9100