STAY IN-TOUCH
 
Join RSS Feed
Join mailing list






Joanna Lumley as The Princess
Joanna Lumley as The Princess
Share
Review Round-up: Has Bete Got Better with Age?
Date: 8 July 2010

One of this summer’s most anticipated offerings, Matthew Warchus’ starry revival of David Hirson’s Moliere-inspired 1991 comedy La Bete opened last night (7 July 2010, previews from 26 June) at the West End's Comedy Theatre, where it continues until 4 September 2010 prior to an immediate Broadway transfer.

The play is billed as “a comic tour de force” and centres on Elomire (Frasier's David Hyde Pierce), a high-minded classical dramatist who loves only the theatre, and Valere (Mark Rylance), a low-brow street clown who loves only himself. When the fickle princess (Joanna Lumley) decides she’s grown weary of Elomire’s royal theatre troupe, he and Valere are left fighting for survival as art squares off with ego in a literary showdown for the ages.

Could this art live up to the expectations raised by such a luminous company and creative team?


  • Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (three stars) - “Maybe the anticipation of seeing Mark Rylance, Joanna Lumley and David Hyde Pierce together on one stage in American playwright David Hirson’s La Bete, a theatrical comedy of rhyming couplets set in the 17th-century court of Languedoc, was too much… For what seemed, on its London premiere in 1992, to be a gorgeously explosive and unexpected treat - Alan Cumming played the Rylance role of a bumptious vaudevillian actor, Valère - now appears trite and over-extended, even at a playing time of just over 100 minutes … In a curious way, though, the excellence of Matthew Warchus’ production exposes the emptiness at the heart of the piece, which never really lives up to its own billing as a heated debate about the place of art, integrity and popular passion in the commercial theatre. It’s a shadowy gloss on several Molière plays, notably The Misanthrope, which, despite all its cleverness and facility of elasticated doggerel, remains just that: an insubstantial shadow and a theatrical sleight-of-hand."
  • Michael Billington in the Guardian (three stars) – “I'll say this much: David Hirson's piece of Broadway-originating, pastiche Molière seems less smugly self-admiring than it did on its first appearance in 1992 … David Hyde Pierce is very good at conveying Elomire's volcanic rage as his booklined study is colonised by Valere. But, although he captures Elomire's increasing Alceste-like isolation, he is given insufficient support by Hirson's text in enriching the character. I have no complaints, however, about Joanna Lumley's spoilt brat of a patron, who has undergone a gender-change since the original production, nor about Stephen Ouimette as Elomire's sidekick … Warchus' production is infinitely better balanced than the original. He allows us to see that Valere's work has a crude vigour, and that the principled Elomire, who argues that 'good verse conceals its artifice ideally', is dogmatic. But, even if there is now a hint of dialectical debate, Hirson's play still contains two fundamental flaws. We actually get to see Valere's lowbrow art, whereas Elomire's credentials as a serious artist have to be taken on trust. Valere himself, set up as a boorish idiot, is also miraculously allowed to turn into an articulate spokesman who impresses the patron by talk of 'the slipping standards of our shallow culture'.”
  • Libby Purves in The Times (five stars) - “We've waited for this one, in wondering hope … It's a tough gig, raising that much expectation, and it's no common play … it defies categorisation. You are forced to laugh all through and then confront a bleak unresolved ending to the central question … Rylance, of course, shines. Who else could hold us, hysterical yet horrified, for the first half of David Hirson's headlong play as he preens and digresses, a compulsive deluded entertainer rebuilding the very language … At one stage, standing on the table, he declares 'God love the critics! Bless their picky hearts!' Much nervous laughter in the stalls. But why pick? It's grown-up panto, it's clever, it's quite deep, it could not be better done. You may hate it, but you'll never see anything quite like it again.”
  • Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph (two stars) –“This is a play which begins brilliantly only to turn dismally flat as it runs out of comic invention and momentum. The first 35 minutes are blissfully funny as Rylance comes on as the pretentious street entertainer and delivers an extraordinarily long monologue, extolling his own genius, with occasional moments of false modesty, while revealing himself to be an egregious ass … This is high definition comic acting of an exceptional order, bursting with grotesque detail and energy, while also proving unexpectedly endearing. Somehow even Rylance's knees seem both hilariously funny and strangely touching. But after that it is downhill all the way as the play turns into a more serious debate about art, ethics and the power of patrons … Initially promising, it becomes so self-regarding and ultimately arid that our initially joyous laughter dies in the throat.”
  • Henry Hitchings in the Evening Standard (three stars) – “'This is turning out to be my night,' says Mark Rylance’s character in this revival of David Hirson’s 1991 play, but in truth it’s Rylance’s night from the very start … The play doesn’t sustain its initial bravura, though, and for all the inventiveness of Matthew Warchus’ production, it feels repetitious. The writing is in places technically remarkable, yet not genuinely dramatic. Elomire’s hostility to Valere is numbingly reiterated. The intervention of the Princess, a punk version of Miss Havisham, is frankly tedious, and the role seems wrong for Joanna Lumley. Hyde Pierce is dry and clipped as Elomire, and there’s a nice turn by Stephen Ouimette as his sidekick, but this is Rylance’s show. That makes its development into a battle of ideas, in its rather stodgy second half, disappointing.”
  • - Theo Bosanquet & Ellie Pullen

    Related Content

    Booking Tickets & Show Listings
    La Bete Listing Page
    Internal Links
    Photos: Lumley Has Busman’s Holiday at Priscilla - 16th Aug 2010 photos
    La Bête starstarstar - 8th Jul 2010 reviews
    1st Night Photos: Lumley & Rylance Place Betes - 8th Jul 2010 photos
    Mark Rylance Recycles Costumes at Comedy??? - 14th Jun 2010 gossip
    Cast: Mercedes Ruehl's Avenue, La Bete, Railway - 26th May 2010 news
    Nunn Directs Stage Premiere of Faulks’ Birdsong - 24th May 2010 news
    Lumley, Rylance & Hyde Pierce Bring Bete Pre-NY - 16th Feb 2010 news


    Reader Comments


    CommentDate
    So Libby Purves proves the cynics right. Five stars for this crap, I don't think so. Glad I don't bother to pay for her views in that rag....what's it called? - Joesmith

    08 Jul 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.


    buy tickets buy tickets
    buy tickets
    buy tickets
    buy tickets




    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


    © Whatsonstage 1996-2012
    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
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

    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

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

    London Theatre Show openings & closings
    FAQ
    Work for us - current vacancies
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com
    Find and Book cheap UK Hotels

    Marketing Services:
    Website design
    Email marketing & CRM services

    Content feeds
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

    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 Ticket Discounts.

    Products
    Whatsonstage.com
    What's On Stage Magazine
    Whatsonstage.com Awards
    Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
    Testimonials
    Contact us
    Advertise with us

    Terms and Conditions
    Privacy Statement

    Loading...

    Book by Phone:
    London Theatre Tickets: 0207 492 1565

    Outings & Club: 020 7317 9100

    A Bowl of Cherries Tickets  |  A Tale of Two Cities Tickets  |  Abigail's Party Tickets  |  Absent Friends Tickets  |  All New People Tickets  |  Backbeat Tickets  |  Ballet Preljocaj Tickets  |  Ballet Revolucion Tickets  |  Big Pants and Botox Tickets  |  Billy Elliot - The Musical Tickets  |  Blood Brothers Tickets  |  Chicago Tickets  |  Compania Antonio Gades Tickets  |  Coppelia Tickets  |  Cosi fan tutte Tickets  |  Crazy for You Tickets  |  Dancing to Lorca Tickets  |  Danza Contemporanea de Cuba Tickets  |  Don Giovanni Tickets  |  Dr Dee Tickets  |  Dreamboats and Petticoats Tickets  |  DV8 Physical Theatre Tickets  |  Frank Skinner Tickets  |  Ghost the Musical Tickets  |  Hans Klok Tickets  |  Hay Fever Tickets  |  Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain Tickets  |  I Dreamed a Dream Tickets  |  Jackie Mason Tickets  |  Jersey Boys Tickets  |  Jose Merce Tickets  |  Juno and the Paycock Tickets  |  Legally Blonde Tickets  |  Les Miserables Tickets  |  Long Day's Journey into Night Tickets  |  Mamma Mia! Tickets  |  Manuela Carrasco Tickets  |  Master Class Tickets  |  Matilda Tickets  |  Midnight Tango Tickets  |  My First Sleeping Beauty Tickets  |  Naked Boys Singing! Tickets  |  Nederlands Dans Theater 2 (NDT2) Tickets  |  New Adventures Tickets  |  Noises Off Tickets  |  Olga Pericet Tickets  |  Oliver! Tickets  |  One Man, Two Guvnors Tickets  |  Pajama Men Tickets  |  Pet Shop Boys and Javier De Frutos Tickets  |  Pippin Tickets  |  Play Without Words Tickets  |  Rafael Amargo Company Tickets  |  Richard Alston Dance Company Tickets  |  Rock of Ages Tickets  |  Romeo and Juliet Tickets  |  Royal Ballet of Flanders Tickets  |  Rusalka Tickets  |  Scottish Ballet Tickets  |  Sex with a Stranger Tickets  |  She Stoops to Conquer Tickets  |  Shrek - The Musical Tickets  |  Singin' in the Rain Tickets  |  Stomp Tickets  |  Sweeney Todd Tickets  |  That Thing Friday Night Tickets  |  The 39 Steps Tickets  |  The Awkward Squad Tickets  |  The Ballet Boyz Tickets  |  The Comedy of Errors Tickets  |  The Complete World of Sports (abridged) Tickets  |  The Duchess of Malfi Tickets  |  The Importance of Being Earnest Tickets  |  The Ladykillers Tickets  |  The Leisure Society Tickets  |  The Lion King Tickets  |  The Madness of George III Tickets  |  The Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) Tickets  |  The Mousetrap Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Pitmen Painters Tickets  |  The Royal Ballet Tickets  |  The Tiger Who Came to Tea Tickets  |  The Wizard of Oz Tickets  |  The Woman in Black Tickets  |  Three Days in May Tickets  |  Thriller Live! Tickets  |  Top Hat Tickets  |  Travelling Light Tickets  |  Umoja - The Spirit of Togetherness Tickets  |  Vicente Amigo Tickets  |  Wah! Wah! Girls Tickets  |  War Horse Tickets  |  Wayne McGregor/Random Dance Tickets  |  We Will Rock You Tickets  |  Wicked Tickets