Synopsis A comedy that reflects on how bewildering, yet utterly pleasurable, love can be. Floriano has killed the Prince of Spain and fled, the army on his heels. Erifila has run away from her father to escape an abhorrent arranged marriage. Fearing for their lives they are forced to feign madness to hide in Valencia’s famed asylum, only to become entangled in an hilarious game of love, lust, madness and mistaken identity.
Madness in Valencia, by the classic Spanish writer Lope de Vega, opens at the Trafalgar Studios following a successful run at the White Bear last year. The new venue, in its former incarnation as the Whitehall Theatre, was synonymous with British farce. The play follows in that comic tradition with larger than life characters who spend much of the play in their underwear pretending to be someone else, and a plot with more flourishes and turns than a flamenco dancer.
The play begins with Floriano (an excellent performance from William Belchambers), bursting noisily onto the stage and into the city of Valencia. He is on the run having murdered a nobleman. His best friend Valerio finds him refuge in the city’s asylum. There he meets Erifila (Kathryn Beaumont), a noblewoman who has been robbed of all her belongings - and a significant amount of her clothing - and proclaimed mad. Both pretending to be mad, they fall in love and discover that each is in fact sane.
It’s a curious place, the Valencia asylum. There's the odd shackle and chain, as one might expect in a Renaissance madhouse, but precious little suffering or brutality. It is presided over by a doctor whose enthusiastic squirms and capers suggest he is a refugee from Blackadder. Moreover the constant bright lighting does little to help the impression that it’s more of a singles’ holiday camp where everyone is after a mate.
Love’s tangled web provides the rest of the plot. All the other women in the play also fall for Floriano, and decide that they will act mad in order to woo him. Even honest Valerio, visiting Floriano, is smitten by Erifila too and decides to pose as a relative in order to claim custody of her. This is the only spot of darkness in the play: Floriano must sacrifice his beloved Erifila to Valerio in return for him having saved his life. For a moment tragedy threatens, but a happy ending ensues, even for Laida the maid who insists on a rerun of the ending so she too can get a husband.
David Johnston’s freshly irreverent translation brings the play smartly into the present day with contempory references and jokes. Director Simon Evans takes the exuberance of the text as his key and brings such energy and movement to the play that it threatens at times to burst out of the confines of the studio space. However, his use of the framing device of a company putting on a play could do with more delicate handling.
Improvised exchanges with the audience are always risky. They can give the evening the feel of a student production unless done well. But that said, this is a funny, bouncy play performed with enthusiasm and gusto in the best of the comic tradition. And, like the old Whitehall farces, you can take your Auntie to see it without too many blushes.
Look up romp in a theatrical dictionary and there should be an entry for Madness in Valencia. An utterly bonkers plot involves almost every character attempting to get locked up in an asylum in pursuit of love. A young cast tackle an updated script with exuberance, crashing down the fourth wall and even coming up with an alternative ending. Kathryn Beaumont is a spirited Erifila and also serves as Associate Producer - whatever that entails, but she is clearly a name to keep an eye on. I have been laid up with a bad back all week and have now started a filthy cold (aah!) but Madness in Valencia succeeded in raising my spirits for a boisterous couple of hours. - David Baxter
Opened 29 Sep 1930, on site of the Old Ship Tavern. Famous for the Whitehall Farces (Brian Rix) which started in 1950. 608 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. An [ATG] member. Closed after the run of Abigail's Party July 12th 2003. The 377 seat Trafalgar Studio opens early 2004. A further 100 seat studio space in the pipeline. Renamed from the Whitehall to Trafalgar Studios.
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