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Synopsis One sunny day in Paris, Gustave Alland, famous artist and philanderer, visits Louise Strindberg - convalescing in her brother’s studio - and casts her effortlessly under his spell. In a vain attempt to escape, she exiles herself to her provincial hometown in Sweden. But a letter propels her back to Paris and into his arms. And for a brief moment, before the horror, ecstasy is hers.
In a recent article, Germaine Greer placed the Swedish novelist and playwright Victoria Benedictsson on a roll call of woman artist suicides from Eleanor Marx and Dora Carrington to Diane Arbus and Sarah Kane. It’s a mortifying list, but it’s hard to deduce any common grounds for the tragedies beyond a sense of self-loathing.
Yet in the case of Benedictsson, who killed herself in 1888 shortly after completing this play, we are somehow invited to conclude that she was driven to the grave by a scandalous love affair with the Danish libertarian critic George Brandes. Ibsen and Strindberg were friends of Brandes, and it’s likely that Benedictsson’s story infused Hedda Gabler and Miss Julie, both written within two years of her death.
In her play, the heroine Louise Strandberg (Nancy Carroll) is not an artist, not even a woman of any political or social passion. She is simply eaten alive with mixed feelings of sensuality, anxiety and regret over her affair with an artist and philanderer, Gustave Alland (Zubin Varla), who seems to be suggestive of Auguste Rodin; Simon Daw’s handsome design incorporates a large photographic nude and a small bronze bust of that artist, who was certainly in Paris when this affair takes off.
The writer Clare Bayley discovered The Enchantment – which was published posthumously and given six performances in Stockholm in 1910 – while researching Scandinavian novels, and her absorbing version has been given a rivetingly well acted production by Paul Miller. The traverse staging proves itself yet again the best way of doing things in the Cottesloe. We feel we are eavesdropping both in the Paris studio and the rain-drenched Swedish retreat where Louise vainly tries to stem the rising flood of despair.
Louise has lost both parents, recovered from typhoid and witnessed her sister’s breakdown. She’s not a happy bunny, but Nancy Carroll imbues her with an irresistible humanity and beautiful languor. Carroll is a brilliant comedienne, but she is also the most rapturously and elegantly sensual of all contemporary actresses, and this performance is as remarkable as any in her illustrious career to date.
Zubin Varla stalks her with predatory, tactical aplomb while Hugh Skinner as her concerned step-brother and Niamh Cusack as Erna Wallden, an appalled artist friend whom Gustave has debauched and abandoned already, bear witness to the inevitable catastrophe. There are lovely vignettes, too, from Avril Elgar as a vinegary concierge, Marlene Sidaway as a wise old housemaid and Patrick Drury as an emollient bank manager. A genuinely fascinating and persuasive discovery.
No wonder the Scandinavians have such a high suicide rate if this is what they grow up with. The Enchantment makes Ibsen and Strindberg look like Ray Cooney farces and could only have been written by a woman with a very limited and unhappy experience of love. The Cottesloe production is not heped by being staged in the round leaving large proportions of the audience staring at the back of an actor's head for most of each scene. The acting is uniformly excellent even from those with very small roles and there is a masterclass in scene stealing from Judith Coke bringing some welcome levity to the unremitting doom. - David Baxter
18 Oct 07
Maybe I was still high from the excitement of Macbeth the night before, but I'm afraid I found this very dull. If you like wistful and gentle plays high on atmosphere but low on action, you might like this. The first half drags a lot; the second perks up a bit - but despite the excellent acting and lovely music, this completely failed to stimulate me. - Gareth James
17 Oct 07
Dull, dull, dull. Not even a fiery performance from Niamh Cusack and the ethereal presence of Nancy Carroll could rescue this piece from trite repetitiveness. The play seems to be nothing but an excuse for the unhappy Benedictsson to indulge her self-absorption. The most disappointing production I have seen at the NT this year. And PLEASE, when will the Cottesloe do something about those dreadful thick wooden barriers which hide so much of the action from those members of the audience not lucky enough to be sitting in the pit? - sc
03 Oct 07
I went in with intangibly low expectations but ended up enjoying it more than I thought I would. In essence, I can't entirely disagree with some of the reservations expressed below (except the one about it being feminist and PC - can't see that at all) but it managed to win me over. I enjoyed all the performances although there were no real standouts. I'm not usually a fan of Zubin Varla and, again, I can see why some would have a problem with him in this role but it worked for me. There was an overall clarity about the production that I liked and I found the atmosphere quite compelling. So I ended up doing quite well out of it but I can see that this is mostly going to be one that gets a thumbs-down. - Sycamore Flint
29 Aug 07
I sat in the front row and was most dissapointed with this play being performed in the round as for most of the play there were various pieces of furniture and standing actors in the line of view. The acting was excellent although the play as a whole failed to ignite any interest in any of the characters. Not for someone who wants a thrilling night at the theatre. - Ivor
25 Aug 07
Miscast in all three leading roles. And dull. - Jan B
19 Aug 07
This is one of the best plays I have seen at the National in recent years. Its a fantastic find of a seldom perferformed peice and the acting is top notch. But I would have to say its not for everyone. I loved but I could easily see how others would not. - rtt
16 Aug 07
The two stars for the staging. Why bother with it in the first place? What is going on at our NT? This was as dull as ditch water. The casting was all to cock. Tedious, tedious, tedious. I nearly left at the interval, but was promised, by one of the ushers, that it was better in the secong half. How wrong was he! Don't waste your hard earned money on this tripe. Mr Hytner - GET A BLOODY GRIP! - rds
12 Aug 07
Was quite disappointed by this ponderous production. Despite the valiant efforts of the luminous Nancy Carroll, I kept thinking that the heroine should just pull herself together. Although intermittently interesting, the show seems longer than it's two and a half hour length, and some of the supporting acting is wretched, unusual for the NT. Niamh Cusack's rivalling friend gains in strength as the show goes on, but Zubin Varla is horribly miscast as a sort of homme fatal. Hardly a must see. - ajh
11 Aug 07
This is an excellent production of an not very relevant play. It's interesting in parts, well-played, but the overall message seems to be better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. The characterisations are finely nuanced and the evening is enhanced by the 3-piece orchestra but it's difficult to know why they put this one on instead of many other alternatives. - kilburncat
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