Quantcast

Darrell D’Silva & Kathryn Hunter
Darrell D’Silva & Kathryn Hunter

Review Round-up: RSC’s Antony Worth the Wait?

Date: 12 May 2010

The delayed press opening of Michael Boyd's modern dress production of Antony and Cleopatra took place this week, with Darrell D’Silva and Kathryn Hunter starring as the famous lovers.

It's four years since the RSC last tackled the play, when Gregory Doran directed a cast led by Patrick Stewart and Harriet Walter.

The new production is designed by Tom Piper with movement by Anna Morrissey and music from James Jones and John Woolf. It will play in repertoire alongside King Lear and Romeo and Juliet (amongst others) at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-Upon-Avon until 28 August before transferring to Newcastle Theatre Royal for a week in October.


  • Simon Tavener in Whatsonstage.com (two stars) – “For an audience to invest emotionally in this play, it's vital at the very least that we can see the passion and fire that exists between the lovers … With Darrell D'Silva and Kathryn Hunter however, we get some humour, some anger but no connection, no emotional bond, no sensuality … Hunter is given an endless series of haute couture outfits and flashes with wit and humour, but … she fails to convince as a queen or a lover. D’Silva also offers a polished masculinity but fails to trace the tragic trajectory of Antony … Director Boyd seems to lack a clear vision of what he wants to portray … fundamentally, this production fails to deliver a coherent and involving vision of the play ... A serious disappointment.”
  • Benedict Nightingale in The Times (four stars) – “Kathryn Hunter’s queen smiles her sinister smile, walks quietly up to him, punches him in the stomach … It’s hilarious…but it’s also central to a splendidly volatile performance. Hunter isn’t obvious casting … But she’s surely more like the real Cleopatra and certainly more the 'Gypsy' that’s one of many descriptions of her in the play. And she’s not just volatile but elastic: physically, mentally, emotionally … I found her refreshingly different, and D’Silva equally riveting to watch … he proceeds to find more than the usual quota of regret, remorse, pain and self-hatred in the role … Michael Boyd’s modern-dress revival is a confident affair itself … given an evening as pacey, lucid and energetic as this.”
  • Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph (four stars) – “Kathryn Hunter is one of the most extraordinary actresses on the British stage … Boyd’s terrific new modern-dress staging of Antony and Cleopatra, one of the funniest and fastest-moving productions of the play I have seen … In the course of a single speech, Hunter will range from anger to humour, from tenderness to cynical calculation … [Darrell D’Silva]’s grizzled, overweight Antony marvellously captures the character’s old ruffian recklessness and his warm, flawed humanity. There is a real chemistry between him and Hunter’s Cleopatra … It’s a cracking production, and my only complaint is that neither Hunter nor D’Silva quite rise to the glorious heights of Shakespeare’s verse at the end. A little more work could surely put that right.”
  • Paul Taylor in the Independent (two stars) – “The leading actor had surgery after an accident in rehearsal with a prop gun. But though the only trace now is a small bandage, the production is dogged by problems that are quite independent of this mishap. Obstinate question-marks dangle over the casting, staging and conception of the political world in this insistently disappointing evening. Kathryn Hunter, in the role of Cleopatra, cuts a compelling figure as a diminutive, wiry and compulsive drama queen … But it's hard to believe that this Cleopatra could ever have infatuated D'Silva's intelligent, well-spoken but rather middle-class and middle-scale Antony. There's no erotic charge and Hunter comes across as a crank in the grip of a demented Cleopatra-complex … too often, the politics in this production are presented ineptly.”
  • Michael Billington in the Guardian (three stars) – “Michael Boyd's modern-dress revival of this difficult play has many fine qualities: speed, lightness, an inventive theatricality. But it also has the defects of its virtues … Hunter gives us an Egyptian queen who is small, mercurial and witty. Her mood changes as frequently as her costumes … Boyd's concept, which is to play the first half as comedy and the second half as tragedy; and, on the whole, the former comes off better … When it comes to the physical staging, rather than the verse-speaking, Boyd's production is first rate ... But, while I applaud Boyd's avoidance of romantic cliche, I still feel he undervalues Shakespeare's ability to create a whole world through heightened poetic language.”
  • Fiona Mountford in the Evening Standard (three stars) – “The programme cover shows [Darrell D’Silva] and Kathryn Hunter looking artfully tousled and bedsheet-bedraped … Yet there’s little suggestion of 'lascivious wassails' from the pair’s matter-of-fact dealings in Michael Boyd’s efficient modern-dress production … D’Silva gives the sense of a rugged, confident and headstrong man who tackles life with gusto. Hunter is more problematic, not least because the wearisome 'foreign' accent she has decided to adopt makes every pronouncement faintly risible … The best work of the night comes from … Cleopatra’s team of whim-fulfilling attendants. The trio display a sinuous ease around each other and the queen, and the women amusingly arrive for each scene in themed outfits that co-ordinate with their mistress’s.”

  • Ian Shuttleworth in the Financial Times (three stars) - “The press night of Michael Boyd's production was postponed for three weeks because of injury. Its rescheduling provided fortuitous parallels between the modern-dress action on stage and the political drama unfolding outside the theatre … The comparisons seemed all the more compelling because, alas, the production does not. Even sitting in the front row … I felt oddly distanced from proceedings … This is a somewhat trivialised Antony … Kathryn Hunter, too, clearly has all the skills and range necessary … And she gives a fine performance, but that is the problem: it is a performance … at times the production has scarcely more life in it than the rubber asps in the final scene.”
  • Related Content

    Booking Tickets & Show Listings
    Antony and Cleopatra Listing Page
    Internal Links
    RSC Launches Investigation After Firearm Injury - 20th Apr 2010 News
    Antony & Cleopatra (RSC) starstarstar - 13th Dec 2010 reviews


    Reader Comments


    CommentDate
    Clearly the R.S.C. has done it again! Dragging failure from what for Shakespeare was a resounding success. When will the current crowd at Stratford realise that Shakespeare is modern and relevant without any undergraduate titivation? It also appears that they have not learned yet to leave well alone and will attempt (always assuming failure) to use a filmic reality when all that is required is imagination and illusion. Let them take the Chorus from Henry V as their yardstick and also for Xt's sake let us hear the verse. - Don Love

    15 Jun 10


    Write a Comment
    Give us your opinion on this entry
    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.

    Free Newsletter

    Subscribe to our free newsletter


    Featured Video

    Twitter

    Featured Editor's Picks

    Jonathan Coy, Felicity Kendal, Kara Tointon & Max Bennett. Photo: Dan Wooller1st Night Photos: Kimberley Walsh & Denise Van Outen toast Tointon in Relatively Speaking
    Strictly Come Dancing stars Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen and Artem Chigvintsev toasted former S...

    Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar 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...

    Kara Tointon. Photo: Nobby ClarkLive Tweeting: #WOSOuting to Kendal & Tointon in Relatively Speaking with Q&A
    Tonight (21 May 2013) we're taking almost 140 Whatsonstage.com theatregoers to see Relatively Speaki...

    Sealed with a kiss: <em>Spiderman<em>ATG acquires Broadway's largest theatre The Foxwoods, home of Spider-Man
    In another significant step for transatlantic theatre relations, the UK’s biggest theatre ...

    Video: Sheila Hancock shows wild side in Barking in Essex trailer
    As this new trailer reveals, Sheila Hancock has had a dramatic TOWIE-style makeover for her forthcom...

    Kara Tointon in Relatively Speaking Review Round-up: Critics convinced by Relatively Speaking?
    Lindsay Posner's revival of Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking opened at the Wyndham's Theatre las...

    Felicity Kendal. Photo: Nobby ClarkRelatively Speaking
    starstarstarstar
    Goodness knows why Alan Ayckbourn's debut success has had to wait 46 years for its first West End ...

    Matilda on BroadwayMatilda on Broadway wins five Drama Desk Awards
    The Broadway transfer of Matilda The Musical has won five gongs at the 58th Annual Drama Desk Awards...

    Ayad AkhtarPulitzer winner Ayad Akhtar: Islam is 'ripe territory' for drama
    Ayad Akhtar's play Disgraced, which won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, receives its UK premiere ...

    Ripe for revival? The Pirate QueenTen of the Best: Theatre 'flops' ripe for reinvention
    Defining a theatre 'flop' is no straightforward task. A general rule of thumb could be that it mak...
    >> More Editor's Picks
    >> Most Recent Stories
    >> Most Popular Stories

    Follow Us

    Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube