Synopsis The Changeling is set in a world of lords and fools where the line between the two is fine. The beautiful Beatrice, driven by her secret lust, enlists the help of her father's servant. But 'honest' Deflores, ugly as sin, drives a harder bargain than she expected. As it changes from bleak tragedy to black farce, 'The Changeling' tells a tale of sex, lies and animal passions. Mayhem is commonplace. Maria Studio
Joe Hill-Gibbins’ cracking new up-tempo, modern dress production of the 1622 Jacobean shocker The Changeling by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley gives a whole new meaning to the term “cupboard love.”
Ultz’s design is a reconfiguration of the square, functional Maria studio as a B and Q warehouse, the audience at ground level seated behind plywood fencing, as in a corrida, with actors concealed in cupboards and boxes in the Spanish castle and mobile cages in the lunatic asylum.
In a skilfully edited version of the full text – no feeble butchery as at the Southwark Playhouse recently – the parallel plots of sexual deceit and possession are gloriously entwined at the wedding feast, where the pageant of madmen and fools embraces everyone in a brilliant rap dance version of the Mendelssohn march (choreography by Maxine Doyle).
Miraculously, eight actors cover all bases, leaving the wonderful Jessica Raine – throwing off her demure persona in the current television hit Call the Midwife – to sink into a quagmire of lust with her hired hit man, De Flores, whom Daniel Cerqueira interestingly portrays as an older, more stolid, bearded and bubble-skinned retainer in a morning suit.
As the wedding party congas round the cake, punch and jellies, these two are left to conga alone on the table; the bridegroom Alsemero (Kobna Holdbrook-Smith) is instantly cuckolded as the price for another, preferred suitor’s murder.
Things get serious when Raine’s Beatrice-Joannna sets up her lady Diaphanta (Charlotte Lucas) in a honeymoon bed-trick to disguise her own lack of chastity. Potions in Alsemero’s closet prove Diaphanta’s virginity when she gapes “incontinently” (prompting a second bout of onstage female micturition following Lisa Dillon’s “accident” in The Shrew at Stratford) and giggles uncontrollably.
We then see groom and bride-substitute thrashing around while smearing each other with party jelly and cream; that red stuff gets everywhere as the stage starts dripping blood in the final scenes; B-J’s anointed fiancé (Duncan Wisbey, who doubles as a Crippen-like asylum keeper) has earlier been drowned in a bowl of punch.
Feigned madness and subterfuge sex run rampant in a play that is merciless in its lack of compassion but ruthless in its understanding of a man (and woman’s, especially) sensual urges. “I am in pain and must be eased of you,” cries De Flores, and Raine becomes more converted to his cause than she is to her own self-indulgence. Her face is a picture of horror as she realises that she’s trapped as an accomplice in the murder.
I can’t recall a better production of the play, nor one that transmits, and literally so, at the end, that distinctive cacophonous Jacobean roar while making the nastiness, and the tragedy, immediately comprehensible to the Young Vic’s audience.
There’s a throb of foreboding and operatic nightmare on Paul Arditti’s soundtrack: the offstage party people are no different from their confined counterparts in the asylum, and it’s fascinating to see the highly impressive Alex Beckett make connections as an apparatchik in both worlds.
If you want to experience suffering for art spend a couple of hours on a wooden bench as the Young Vic allows another director to butcher a great classical play. After Ian Rickson's atrocious Hamlet Joe Hill-Gibbins has attempted to cram Thomas Middleton's The Changeling into less than two hours. Savage cuts to the text have made it partially incomprehensible but he has chosen to retain the barely connected sub-plot, apparently by William Rowley but almost identical to Madness in Valencia, which gives Middleton's far better play even less room to breathe. So, when Beatrice-Joanna enlists the scurvied De Flores to bump off her intended bridegroom her true love simply pops up at the wedding in his place. And, although De Flores violently relieves her of her chastity she seems inexplicably willing to subject herself to him whilst substituting her maid on her wedding night to convince her husband that her virginity is still intacta. Confused? - you will be as they used to say on Soap. Add some risible nonsense with jelly and trifle representing sexual passion and suicide (really!) plus a wedding feast mimed to Beyonce (really!!!) and you have a directorial conceit spiralling out of control. It's also unforgiveable that much of the play is obscured by props or ill-conceived blocking; the finale was invisible behind a large table. Jessica Raine (who seems to have become very thin) is impressive as the tragic anti-heroine but some of the supporting cast are far less assured; the usually excellent Henry LLoyd-Hughes doesn't seem to have a clue what his two characters are meant to be contributing to the piece. The Young Vic seems to be trying to base itself on the European model as a director's theatre (remember I Am the Wind - far, far worse), but they really need to tell them to check their egos at the door. - David Baxter
09 Feb 12
‘The Changeling’, playing at The Young Vic, is an excellent production of Thomas Middleton and William Rowley’s tradgi-comedy, a play which, with its continuously fast-paced movement and numerous asides, is notoriously difficult to pull off. Director Joe Hill-Gibbons, who has to his credit two of last year’s most talked about productions, Martin McDonagh’s ‘The Beauty Queen of Leenane’ (also at The Young Vic) and Penelope Skinner’s George Devine award winning play, ‘The Village Bike’ (at The Royal Court) brings moments of ecstatic joy to this dark Jacobean play of desire, murder and deceit. Two of the most stylistic aspects of this play are that characters walk in and out of boxes, cupboards and cages with as great an equanimity as if they walked through doors, and that they play with and are abused by food. Though some of the strongest emotional points in the play are played in near darkness, if this production wants for anything it is a greater intensity of darkness. The comedy is greatly believable, the tragedy slightly less so.
Middleton and Rowley’s ‘The Changeling’ was licensed in 1622, only six years after Shakespeare’s death. The opening and closing of the play is attributed to Rowley and the greater share of the play, particularly the intense scenes between Beatrice-Joanna and De Flores, to Middleton. The main source of the play is from a collection of short stories by John Reynolds but we find here narrative threads which, erroneously, we think of as particularly Shakespearian, so that we have a man suspicious of his wife’s impurity, a woman impelling a man to kill, the re-emergence of dead man as a ghost. De Flores though, even as he hints back to Malvolio, is a new character, and the women are strong without necessarily being upright or expressing any great pangs of remorse. This is already a changing world from the one we associate with Shakespeare; its values are more negative and cries for redemption, when made, seem half-hearted.
The story is, as with many Jacobean plays, an intricate one. Joanna-Beatrice is betrothed to Alonzo and wants to marry Alsemero. In order to rid herself of Alonzo she engages her father’s servant, De Flores, to kill him. When the crime is committed she seeks to pay De Flores, whom she despises as an ugly wretch, but the only payment he will accept is her in bed. The sub-plot mirrors this theme of great desire as Antonio, disguised as a madman, enters the hospital/home of Alibus in order to woo Alibus’ wife, Isabella, whom he loves.
Paul Arditti’s sound design is superb and provides a rich canvass which surprises and yet ultimately, compliments the richness of the text. The dance sequence, enacted with all the pastiche of the Rocky Horror Show, mimics us through the wedding scene and had audiences in laughter, as did the jelly scene (you’ll just have to go to find out what this means), though the two kinds of laughter were distinct. Dance is appearing quite a lot on the stage at the moment. Here, it works.
Amongst the company of actors, Daniel Cerqueira’s De Flores and Jessica Raine’s Diaphanta/Isabella are particularly notable. The company, however, is a fine one and this review refers to a preview show.
- Nachi Butt
[TMA] member. 2004 - to close for an estimated 18 to 24 months to undergo an essential overhaul costing £12.5 million. Re-opened Oct. 2006 with the new auditoria named in honour of two theatre women, designer Maria Bjornson and director Clare Venables who died in 2002 and 2003 respectively. The Maria seats 160 while the Clare seats 80.
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