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Synopsis Horvarth was a German-speaking Austro-Hungarian whose plays were banned during the Third Reich and rediscovered in the mid-sixties; and in this particular piece dating from 1930 he was writing a prophetic bourgeois tragic-comedy. Marianne, the heroine, is the daughter of a respectable toy-shop owner. She jettisons her fiancé, runs off with an opportunist layabout, has a baby by him and when she in turn is abandoned joins a night club dance troupe. After a head-long encounter with her father in a Viennese club, she is gaoled for theft and emerges to find that her baby had died through the gratuitous cruelty of her lover's Wachau grandmother... Part of The Travelex £10 Season
Dates: Opens 14 October 2003. Oct 7,8,9,10,11,13,20,21,22,23,29,30,31, Nov 1,3,4,5,6,12,13,14,15,17,18,19 19:30. Oct 14 19:00. Oct 23, Nov 1,5,13,15,19 Mats 14:00
For the second time in this year's financially as well as theatrically accessible Travelex £10 season in the Olivier, the National Theatre revisits a former hit of the 1970s.
In the summer, His Girl Friday was a re-working of The Front Page, a massive hit for the theatre during Laurence Olivier's regime in 1971. Now, it takes a fresh look at Odon von Horvath's classic and influential piece of European theatre, premiered in Berlin in 1931 and previously staged at the National in early 1977, shortly after it moved to the South Bank.
Actually, in the way it combines an epic sweep with its acute revelation of intimate lives, Tales from the Vienna Woods resembles a more recent National hit. As with Owen McCafferty's richly populated Scenes from the Big Picture, of lives being lived in contemporary Belfast, von Horvath's play paints a beautifully detailed canvas of life in 1931 Vienna.
On a quiet street in Vienna's 8th District, there are three shops: a butcher, a toy shop, and a tobacconist/newspaper seller. Human emotion comes tumbling out of these establishments as Marianne (Nicola Walker), the daughter of the toy shop owner Herr Spellbinder (Karl Johnson) is betrothed to the butcher, Oskar (Darrell D'Silva), but suddenly falls in love with Alfred (Joe Duttine), who is at the time dating tobacconist Valerie (Frances Barber).
Though the diffuse strands of these stories take some time to come into focus, and the play - like the lives it reflects - is a little messy, director Richard Jones animates it with such rigour and vigour that it is always compelling to watch. Jones is one of Britain's most iconoclastic, and occasionally infuriating, talents, but like Philip Prowse, for him the devil is in the detail.
While other directors are content to create general, and sometimes all-too-generic, mood and atmosphere, Jones sees that every corner of the stage is completely inhabited. Turn your eye away from the centre of the action, and you'll find that the life of the play is continuing, as it should, elsewhere, too.
A superb ensemble cast of some 29 actors populate the daring, eventually driven drama with rich and surprising resonance, even allowing for some melodramatic excesses in the plot as it charts Marianne's slippery downfall until she's revealed to have become a stripper in front of her own father.
Gorgeously underscored throughout by the ironic counterpoint of Johann Strauss waltzes, Jones' production - making do with a necessarily threadbare design by Nicky Gillibrand - shows that big sets aren't necessary to command the massive Olivier stage: the sweep of human lives is big enough.
I saw 19 plays in 14 days, and this was the absolute worst. Empty and meaningless. Just one big dark and chilly play. I didn't care about any of the characters. I was one of MANY who left at the interval. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (216.192.135.131)
11 Nov 03
This show is not as bad as some people are saying and definetly not as good as the websites critic is saying. This is a classic and fascinating play concerning the lives of one community in 30's Europe, but unfortunetly Richard Jones' production does not work. He has decided to create a bare stage setting, which is a very brave thing to do on th olivier but Jones does not pull it off, and the bare stage gave across a very rough feeling when watching, if he had done this in the cottesloe it may have worked. The acting however, as always at the national is brilliant, Frances Barber and Nicola Wallker are both brilliant and Karl Johnson and Darrel D'silva turned in extremely good performances however I was slightly dissapointed by Joe Duttine as the suave card player. This production is definetly not up to the standrds of the others in Nick Hytners brilliant new regime, which is a shame because with a bit more advice and slightly more set this would have worked. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.225.220.31)
09 Nov 03
I finally got around to seeing this this week, and to tell the truth I was rather dreading it, given how negative the reviews had been. To my great surprise, it turned out to be one of the very best of the 40 or so productions I've seen in London this year: riveting, searing drama. And the 14 university students I took with me agreed. Of course, we had studied the play and knew what we were in for. My guess is that many of the people who have protested it so loudly were misled by the NT's publicity and thought they were getting some kind of operetta. It's not: it's a harsh and deeply upsetting portrait of a society in decline, and this production pulls no punches. Brilliantly directed and performed, devastating impact at the end. I urge those who appreciate serious drama, rather than mindless entertainment, to see this before it closes in a couple of weeks. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.10)
07 Nov 03
First half was dreadful. Can't speak for the second as we left. . . life's just too short to watch this sort of turgid nonsense evan at £10 a ticket. A second rate A-level drama student production. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.128.25.20)
30 Oct 03
A disappointment we left at the interval. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.111.25.19)
24 Oct 03
What a disappointment from one our most exciting directors. Turgid, dull, slow, lifeless........I couldn't wait to leave the theatre. The first dud fron the new RNT. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.211.87.4)
23 Oct 03
One of the worst production I've seen in years. And the play is good. A pity. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.58.55.235)
15 Oct 03
Cheaply staged, poorly acted, uninteresting cobblers. The worst thing I have seen on the National's stage in many a year. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
15 Oct 03
I agree that the piece appeared dated butthis seems to be the fault of the production. I remember being dazzled by the last production of this play at the National in the late 70's. Now, we have a slow funereal pace, actors who seem lost on the Olivier stage and a set which seems an enormous hindrance to the actors. In short, a wasted opportunity.
- USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.177.231.164)
15 Oct 03
This is superbly well-acted play but I thought the piece itself was tremendously dated. It might well have been shocking when it was first performed (and certainly got von Horvath into trouble with the Nazis but 21st century tastes are a bit more robust.
For me, it had the air of a museum exhibit that has just been disinterred from the basement and presented to the public: it entertains for a moment and then you ask, "why bother?"
There are some excellent performances, particularly from Darrell D'Silva as the love-lorn butcher, Frances Barber as the sensual tobacconist and Karl Johnson's randy toyshop owner, but I thought that their efforts were wasted. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.120.117.40)
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