Use the form below to search for tickets on your desired date. Dates from
Synopsis Written around 1600 and set in two contrasting communities; city and forest. Rosalind and Celia have been banished from Court. In fear of their lives, they disguise themselves and seek sanctuary in the Forest of Arden. Amongst the magical and ancient boughs, Rosalind discovers her exiled father, uncovers various truths about herself and others...and falls helplessly in love. But in this earthly paradise nothing is quite what it seems: men do not always act like men, and women can be anything at all...Uplifting, awe-inspiring and immense fun, Shakespeare's wondrous comedy is a joyous celebration of the liberating power of love and the redeeming spirit of nature. Running Time approx. 3 hours 10 minutes including one interval.
NOTE: This review dates from August 2005 and this production's original run in Stratford-upon-Avon.
According to taste, As You Like It is either a sublime comedy - fast-paced, moving, at once accessible and enjoyable - or a work that has too much to say about what was once intimately interesting and now is not.
Unfortunately, I take the latter view. Admirers will no doubt find much entertainment in this, the final offering in the RSC’s season of Comedies, which is directed by Dominic Cooke with thought and dash. At the risk of derision though, I find this a ‘problem’ play and can only wave to fans across leagues of ocean.
All the usual elements of a Shakespearean comedy – flight from the city to the countryside, cross-dressing - are present and correct. What the play also has, though, is some of the most unfathomable and unfunny comedy - to these ears at least.
Music plays a large role in the play. Indeed, people have suggested As You Like It is best considered as a proto-comedy musical, something which wouldn’t properly be realised in England for more than a century with The Beggar’s Opera. Appropriately then, Cooke's production begins with all the cast coming on stage to sing a rousing, acapella version of Under the Greenwood Tree.
The tree also looms large in this Forest of Arden, with a single massive conifer rising from the stage into the rafters in Rae Smith’s clean design. The switch from the court of the usurping Duke Frederick to the exiled court of Duke Senior is achieved by a simple change of costume.
Barnaby Kay is an ardent, vigorous Orlando and the early wrestling scene is the best I’ve seen. Lia Williams is tough and touching as Rosalind and Joseph Mydell is fine as Jacques, if a little over-ponderous. Paul Chahidi, excellent this season, battles valiantly, but largely in vain against his dull lines, as Touchstone; and there is good work too from John Mackay as Oliver.
Having seen 3 of the 4 Comedies in the current season at the Novello I have to say how disappointed I was at this one. I accept that Shakespeare recycled his stories on a regular basis but do the RSC really need to recycle ways of staging plays? I don't feel that I have seen 3 plays - just one performed 3 times. I really wouldn't bother going to this one if I were you - not worth the ticket price. - 82.110.212.210)
Opened 22 May 1905, originally the Waldorf, became the Strand in 1909 and the Whitney in 1911, back to the Strand in 1915. On 8 Oct 1940 the theatre was hit during a bombing raid - the show went on! There had been an earlier Strand Theatre where the Aldwych tube station now is that opened in 1832. 1061 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. On 25 March 2003 Delfont Mackintosh Theatres Limited, which had owned the freehold of the theatre since 1991, took over the management of the Strand from the Louis I Michaels Ltd Group of Companies when their lease expired. Delfont Mackintosh is now planning a 1.5 million refurbishment programme to restore the theatre to its former glory. May 2005 opened as Novello Theatre.
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.