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Synopsis Falstaff gets him come-uppance (three times) in this rather confused but at times immensely funny Shakespeare comedy - his only one about the middle classes. The story, almost certainly false, goes that Queen Elizabeth I so enjoyed the character of Falstaff that she asked to see him again in another play - in love. Shakespeare is supposed to have obliged with this delightful romp. Part of the Totus Mundus Season. Totus mundus agit histrionem is thought to have been the motto of the first Globe - 'The whole world is a playhouse'
Serena Evans & Christopher Benjamin in Merry Wives
Date: 20 June 2008
Twelve years after it opened, Shakespeare’s Globe presents its first production of the Bard’s most raucous comedy The Merry Wives of Windsor this summer, as part of artistic director Dominic Dromgoole’s “Totus Mondus” season at the open-air Bankside landmark.
The production – directed by Christopher Luscombe and designed by Janet Bird, who worked together on the Globe’s 2006 staging of The Comedy of Errors - opened on Wednesday (18 June 2008, previews from 8 June) and continues in rep until.
The fat knight Sir John Falstaff imagines that Mistress Ford and Mistress Page are both taken with him and so, attracted as much by their husbands’ money as their personal charms, he decides to woo them both. But the women are up to the old lecher’s tricks and turn the tables on him. Christopher Benjamin stars as Falstaff, with Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward as his two paramours.
Critics warmly welcomed this “obvious crowd-pleaser” to the Globe, where most felt – particularly given the unique demands of the venue - it had found an ideal home thanks to Christopher Luscombe’s “sunny, funny and palpably affectionate”, Janet Bird’s “inventive” design, Christopher Benjamin’s “perfect” and “irrepressible” Falstaff, Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward’s “infectious” and “joyously played” Mistresses and, last but not least, the performances of an “exceptionally strong supporting company”. This is “merriness unbridled” raved one, while another declared it “the feelgood hit of the summer”.
Maxwell Cooter on Whatsonstage.com (three stars) - “It’s hard to understand why it’s taken so long for the Globe to stage this, Shakespeare’s most immediately funny play … Christopher Luscombe’s production, while not wholly satisfying, certainly brings out much of the comedy of Falstaff’s wooing of Alice Ford. But I couldn’t help feeling that while he was nearly there, the end result could have been much funnier … There is a much better comic turn from Andrew Havill as the ever-jealous Frank Ford. Like the spiritual ancestor of Basil Fawlty, he gets the balance of anger and indignation just right as he straddles the roles of plotter and victim … Havill is ably supported by Sarah Woodward as Alice Ford and Serena Evans as Meg Page, conniving happily in the twin deception of both Falstaff and Ford … This is, overall, a very funny production – but then, this is a very funny play. The first-night audience went home happy enough, but my gut feeling is that once this settles down a bit, this production will be even funnier.”
Paul Taylor in the Independent - “As this exuberant outing proves, the Globe provides an ideal environment for the piece … This revival is zestfully alert to how Merry Wives anticipates modern sitcom with its social climbing middle-classes, its very English belief that all foreigners are automatically idiotic and its knockabout farce involving a frantically suspicious husband who makes Basil Fawlty look about as manic as Desmond Lyman. The beauty of the production is that it manages to be high-spirited in this regard without being heavy-handed … The deliciously inventive comic business is a joy in itself but also reveals insights into character … Falstaff may be a diminished figure in Merry Wives, but Christopher Benjamin engagingly captures the irrepressible conceit that, even after a dunking in the Thames and a sound beating, makes him think he will be third time lucky. Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward are beautifully convincing as old friends and radiate infectious delight in their collaborative efforts to turn the tables on the fat knight … Janet Bird's striking, simple design sends a walkway through the audience and right round the stage.”
Fiona Mountford in the Evening Standard (four stars) – “Legend has it that Elizabeth I was so taken with Sir John Falstaff, the roistering fat knight of the Henry IV plays, that she commanded Shakespeare instantly to write another drama with him in it. Good Queen Bess herself would surely have beamed at this delightful take on that royal command script, quite the best and freshest work I've seen at the Globe in several years. Christopher Luscombe's period-dress production, full of clever touches, is more fluid and flexible than many that come to staid, sticky ends in this notoriously difficult arena … Christopher Benjamin's lovable old rogue of a Falstaff, all exuberantly coloured clothing and huge belly, is up to his usual tricks ... He is run deliciously ragged by these mischievous minxes, joyously played by Sarah Woodward and Serena Evans … This is indisputably Shakespeare's jolliest comedy - and the only one without the slightest shadow of death lingering about it … Merriness unbridled.”
Simon Edge in the Daily Express (three stars) – “There is a parlour game to be played spotting the small-screen references in Christopher Luscombe’s entertaining production. Early on, one of Sir John Falstaff’s henchmen gives a Corporal Jones salute from Dad’s Army. The Welsh parson Sir Hugh Evans sounds like a direct ancestor of Rob Brydon in Gavin and Stacey. And Andrew Havill’s strangulated performance as the jealous husband Ford, resorting to mad physical jerks when language deserts him, is an unashamed lift from Basil Fawlty … Designer Janet Bird has been inventive within her brief … As the fat knight, Christopher Benjamin is an amusingly woebegone lecher … As Mistress Page, Serena Evans is a shrill little bird but the kind that would stick its beak in your eye. Mistress Ford (Sarah Woodward) is at the other end of the vocal scale, with deep, lacrosse-stick tones. The hoot they have together is infectious. Evans silently cracking-up as she spins a yarn for the benefit of the eavesdropping Falstaff is a particular joy.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “Christopher Luscombe, who once excelled as a Shakespearean comic actor himself, directs a sunny, funny and palpably affectionate production, cleverly designed by Janet Bird so that the timbered acting area extends into the pit, complete with dinky humpback bridges and the revelation of a delightful secret garden … Though the Falstaff of The Merry Wives … is a far less complex character than the one who appeared in the two parts of Henry IV, Christopher Benjamin plays him with rich, ripe panache … Though he's constantly humiliated, Benjamin's Falstaff miraculously retains his joie-de-vivre. In an exceptionally strong supporting company, Andrew Havill's chisel-faced Ford is a sublimely comic study of obsessive jealousy and tortured masochism, Sarah Woodward is a gruff, capable delight as his resilient wife, while William Belchambers is deliciously fatuous as that most diffident of lovers, Abraham Slender. This is one of the most enjoyable productions I have ever seen at the Globe and looks like the feelgood hit of the summer.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail (four stars) – “Shakespearean humour can sometimes be excruciating … and the last stab at The Merry Wives of Windsor story a couple of years ago saw the RSC, Dame Judi Dench and Simon Callow sink with all hands lost. The open-topped Globe has far greater success with this old crowd pleaser, happily. It makes for an exceedingly jolly night out … Christopher Luscombe’s cast deliver a pacy evening, traditional yet inventive … Christopher Benjamin makes a perfect Falstaff, bulked up with a vast belly yet showing a trim pair of stockinged legs. Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward are well paired as Mistresses Page and Ford, but the real revelation is Andrew Havill as the ‘cuckold’ Frank Ford.”
Christopher Luscombe’s production of Shakespeare’s examination of the middle classes proved to be a big success at the Globe in 2008. It therefore makes perfect sense to revive the play, it fitting in perfectly with the theme of Kings and Rogues – Falstaff, of course, being the Platonic ideal of rogues.
So, it's interesting to see whether the revival, with broadly the same cast can achieve the same effect. Perhaps it's my imagination but the comedy seems much more obvious this time round. The programme has an article about how television sitcoms owe a debt to this play and Luscombe seems to want to hammer the point home at every stage in the production.
The music is used differently too. Nigel Hess's score has the same sort of function that Ronnie Hazlehurst used to have for countless BBC television comedies by providing a sort of jaunty commentary to events.
So, Falstaff doesn't need to see Ford (disguised as Brooke) appearing, he says “here he comes now” on first hearing a jaunty theme. I don't recall the score being quite so dominant, two years ago. It's not all jauntiness though, Hess does produce a lovely setting of a love song for Fenton and Anne Page.
Christopher Benjamin's put-upon knight has just the right mixture of lechery and pathos - there seems to be more awareness of his foibles than in the previous production. Andrew Havill's splendid Ford, on the other hand, seems to be even more Basil Fawlty-like than before, almost contorting himself with fury at Falstaff’s machinations. As the eponymous wives, Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward make an excellent double act, while Gareth Armstrong's Hugh Evans provides a droll commentary on events.
This is the perfect play for the Globe, the comedy can reach right out to the groundlings. I’m still not convinced about the way that Janet Bird’s set splits the audience in two. – and a sudden downpour must have made the walkway very slippery, full marks to the actors for keeping their feet.
This remains a very funny production if some of the power of Shakespeare's word-play has been sacrificed for some more physical comedy, but it's a surefire hit, one lapped up by the Globe audience.
- Maxwell Cooter
NOTE: The following THREE-STAR review dates from June 2008, and this production's original run at Shakespeare's Globe.
It’s hard to understand why it’s taken so long for the Globe to stage this, Shakespeare’s most immediately funny play. As the programme notes point out, in many ways this is the forerunner of the modern sit-com and as such should be an obvious crowd-pleaser.
Christopher Luscombe’s production, while not wholly satisfying, certainly brings out much of the comedy of Falstaff’s wooing of Alice Ford. But I couldn’t help feeling that while he was nearly there, the end result could have been much funnier. He’s not helped by Janet Bird’s design, which includes a walkway that bisects the groundlings’ area. Not only does this mean that some members of the audience are, like tennis spectators, having to turn their heads during certain scenes, but also that some of the dialogue is lost in the general hubbub.
Christopher Benjamin’s Falstaff savours the prose, relishing every phrase like it was vintage sack and speaking so clearly that not one word was inaudible, even in the Globe’s rather unforgiving environment. But while amusing, he didn’t quite have the timing to wrest every laugh from the part. For example, the line about mistaking his erection, normally guaranteed to bring the house down, passed by with just few titters.
Benjamin was not alone in misfiring lines; as Slender, Will Belchambers was equally guilty, many of his malapropisms being met by total silence. However, he struck the right note with his hesitant wooing of Anne Page.
There is a much better comic turn from Andrew Havill as the ever-jealous Frank Ford. Like the spiritual ancestor of Basil Fawlty, he got the balance of anger and indignation just right as he straddled the roles of plotter and plot victim. He includes some nice touches, making great use of the supporting pillars on the Globe stage, hiding by them while dancing at Falstaff’s discomfort in being pitched into the river.
Havill is ably supported by Sarah Woodward as Alice Ford and Serena Evans as Meg Page, conniving happily in the twin deception of both Falstaff and Ford. There’s an excellent moment when the women pretend to belch to disguise the groans of Falstaff in the laundry basket - these are merry wives indeed. I also liked Gareth Armstrong’s nicely-played Hugh Evans and Philip Bird’s Dr Caius – but then, you can’t go far wrong with a comic foreigner - every sit-com needs one. And Nigel Hess’s incidental music perfectly complements the dialogue.
This is, overall, a very funny production – but then, this is a very funny play. The audience went home happy enough but my gut feeling is that once this settles down a bit, this production will be even funnier.
After Thea Sharrock's sublimely hilarious As You Like It last year, I was shocked at how poor this was. To evoke Basil Fawlty is to provoke comparison, and here the inadequacy on display was toe-curling. The play was flung at the audience, whereas last year's comedy drew us in and touched our hearts even as it attacked our collective funny bone. This unsubtle mess is wretched stuff by comparison and its manic atmosphere smacks of desperation. A second star only because I quite enjoyed the finale. - Job
23 Sep 10
I totally agree with David Baxter. It's the perfect play for the Globe (in the same way that A Midsummer Night's dream is the perfect play for the Open Air Theatre). Christopher Luscombe's production extracts every laugh possible - and more. Christopher Benjamin is a wonderful Falstaff and Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward a great double-act. Delightful and uplifting. - Gareth James
18 Sep 08
At last, The Globe makes sense. A sparkling production of one of Shakespeare's broadest and bawdiest comedies, sensibly cut to two and a half hours and played to a packed and appreciative audience. The school parties particularly enjoyed the allusive characterisations: Basil Fawlty as Ford, Inspector Clousseau as Caius and Slender more Graham Norton than Colin Firth. Christopher Benjamin is a garrulous Falstaff, fully aware of the disadvantages of his bulk but determined to pursue the Merry Wives regardless. Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward are exceptional as Mistresses Page and Ford and there is not a single weak performance in Christopher Luscombe's splendid production, the best I have seen at The Globe. - David Baxter
10 Sep 08
Took my sister and her (not Shakespeare-loving) friend to this and we all had a tremendous night out. Great Falstaff and some real comic turns made this the sort of production that leaves you on a high. - addicted to theatre
26 Aug 08
This is clearly the best the Globe has produced in a long while. It is fantastically funny and makes Shakespeare much more accessible for those who have memories of bad english lecturers who have no idea (like below). I find it interesting Ian Nase comments on two of the best performances as the worst... perhaps he is jealous! ha!
Anyway i thoroughly enjoyed this production. Go and see it now... thats if you can get a ticket! - John Kraen
02 Aug 08
Not sure why someone has left two comments with different ratings. Or why anyone would bother to leave such a bald two word statement as John Beach does. But in any event, the good news is that this production is every bit as good and as funny as the near-universal press raves say it is. It is the first time at the Globe that I have felt truly as though this is the only possible venue for this only possible production of this play. The design is stunning. Luscombe has assembled a crack team, and the quality of the comic acting is exceptionally high. Unusally for this venue or any other large-scale Shakespeare production, the team bats all the way down. And the show contains a jewel of a performance from Andy Havill as Ford, plus a clever and potentially career-making turn from Will Belchambers as Slender. Not to mention the heroic Sarah Woodward in yet another Globe triumph. This show will sell out, even in the Yard. So book early. - Will Simonsen
21 Jun 08
Unbelievably bad - John Beach
20 Jun 08
I was not impressed. What an insult! I expect more from the globe - this was obvious, and over the top. I thought a lot of the performances were weak - particularly slender and Mr Ford...they just seemed to be trying too hard to add characterisation that Shakespare doesn't need. As an english literature lecturer i found the language was spoken far too pronounced.
I do not go to the globe expecting bad pantomime!
It just seemed like a very adequate production.
Steer well clear. - Ian Nase
20 Jun 08
I was not impressed. What an insult! I expect more from the globe - this was obvious, and over the top. I thought a lot of the performances were weak - particularly slender and Mr Ford...they just seemed to be trying too hard to add characterisation that Shakespare doesn't need. As an english literature lecturer i found the language was spoken far too pronounced.
I do not go to the globe expecting bad pantomime!
It just seemed like a very adequate production.
Steer well clear. - Ian Nase
A rebuild of Shakespeare's original Globe theatre close to the original site. Society of London Theatre member. Note: Booking opened March 3rd 1996. Tickets for performances range from £5 (standing in the yard) to £37.50 for the best gallery seats). Induction loop facilities. Wheelchair facilities. Extensive education programme. Restaurant, cafe and bar. Dark during the winter but the museum and venue remain open. One of the few London venues with Sunday performances. The Globe Theatre Season runs from April to October. The Globe Education Centre is located in Park Street and runs an educational autumn season.
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