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Synopsis Based on Ingmar Bergman's film Smiles of a Summer Night, A Little Night Music is set in turn-of-the-century Sweden where affairs of the heart are uppermost in everyone's thoughts. Elegant and stylish show featuring bittersweet songs including The Miller's Son and the classic Send in the Clowns.
Trevor Nunn’s superb Menier Chocolate Factory revival of Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler’s magical musical A Little Night Music transfers perfectly to the West End’s intimate Garrick Theatre. The cast is virtually the same, the valet’s extraneous song has been wisely cut, the acting generally sharpened.
I have one serious complaint. The microphoning levels are too high, too metallic. After the interval the levels levelled out a bit, but too much damage is inflicted on the limpid, deliquescent music and on Jason Carr’s brilliant orchestrations for a small band of musicians who quite rightly joined the cast on stage for a first night bow.
Why do we have to have any microphoning at all, frankly? Can’t these people sing and speak in a small theatre? We can certainly hear them, I suppose, and hardly a syllable of the exquisite score is swallowed. “Every Day a Little Death” may be taken slower than warranted, but the bonding in marital misery relationship of Kelly Price’s fine Countess and Jessie Buckley’s much improved child bride Anne is beautifully charted.
Similarly, the “Send in the Clowns” scene between Hannah Waddingham’s lustrous, delightfully bitchy Desiree and Alexander Hanson’s definitive, interestingly complex married lawyer Fredrik is a jewel of Chekhovian acting. Waddingham’s delivery of the song, not too drenched in tears, is an exemplary restoration of its dramatic clout as the carapace crumbles.
Maureen Lipman’s Madam Armfeldt comes into clearer focus as a witty wraith at death’s door, though the wig should join Dame Judi’s down the road in Madame de Sade on the bonfire. Sort it, Mo! And Gabriel Vick’s marvellously sung, suicidal Henrik, a seminarian with semen to spare, is a totem of the show’s – and of Ingmar Bergman’s source film, Smiles of a Summer Night - pent-up sensuality and piquant misery.
Alistair Robins is spot-on as the ludicrously chauvinistic Count Carl-Magnus (his duelling duet with Hanson, “It Would Have Been Wonderful,” is a witty highlight) and Kaisa Hammarlund repeats her tumultuous delivery of “The Miller’s Song”.
The company waltzes out of the mist-laden forest where David Farley’s design of glass doors and silver birches accommodates all interiors, and scene changes, with impressive ease and fluency, underpinned by the seductive linking music. The score’s a masterpiece, no question, and this wonderful revival sets the standard for many years to come.
- Michael Coveney
NOTE: The following FOUR-STAR review dates from December 2008 and this production’s original run at the Menier Chocolate Factory.
The opening is magical. The quintet of choric singers emerges from the mists of memory in a hall of mirrors, spinning to the waltz of a summer night. They whirl away, leaving us with father, son and a virgin bride declaring their respective dilemmas in “Now,” “Later” and “Soon”: immediate seduction, hopeless frustration and excitement on the brink.
Trevor Nunn’s chamber-scale revival of this gorgeous 1973 musical – music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by Hugh Wheeler, based on Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night (itself derived from a Marivaux play) – allows us almost to eavesdrop on the characters.
The conversational quality of this score, both in this sequence and perhaps especially in the face-off between Desiree Armfeldt’s rival lovers, “It Would Have Been Wonderful,” has never been better realised. Nunn also veers more emphatically towards the Scandinavian angst over the Broadway bitchery. Costumes are black suits and cream silks, with oaten variations.
Desiree the touring actress is played with willowy flightiness by Hannah Waddingham, toying with the affections of both Alexander Hanson’s superb Fredrik (revealing the subtlety of the role as well as its vanity) and Alistair Robins’ unreasonable Count until she realises where her true heart lies – in the sad confusion of “Send in the Clowns.”
That late addition to the score is its masterpiece, despite years of hackneyed reproduction, whereas the new song “Silly People” (only ever heard on the concert platform before) slows down the second act and adds nothing new. The only fault of Nunn’s meticulous, often obsessively Chekhovian direction, is the odd loss of pace, often in scenes with Jessie Buckley’s underpowered, gauchely acted teenage bride Anne.
The bite is restored first by Maureen Lipman as the old chatelaine Madame Armfeldt, Desiree’s mother, who plays the comic Lady Bracknell side of the role at the expense of its European grandeur, and secondly by Kelly Price as the Count’s vengefully plotting wife. The National’s 1995 revival by Sean Mathias was too soft and languid a spectacle; this has all the bittersweet melancholy and mordancy of Bergman with a top skin of Woody Allen.
The Menier treatment is becoming as distinctive as a Donmar Warehouse brand. David Farley’s design is simple and brilliant, the mirrored panels opening onto a forest of silver birches, lit to perfection by Hartley T A Kemp. And Jason Carr does another remarkable job in reducing a rich score to its orchestral minimum (six musicians) without losing an ounce of impact or flavour. A little chamber night music is just the job.
I had never been to the Menier before but it is definetly my favourite theatre (along with Her Majesty's). This show is an inspiration- Hannah Waddingham and Alexander Hanson are sensational and Maureen Lipman is perfection, such good comic timing! Jessie Buckley was much better than I expected, Gabriel Vick played his part perfectly and special mention must go to Grace Link who is the best child actor I have ever seen. Hope is makes its way into town soon as planned. - N Kent
15 Feb 09
This show can't be beaten - it is Sondheim at its best, performed by a cast where every one of them deliver a superb performance. Its got humour, pathos, rhythm, energy, and great music. The Menier has that special intimacy of being a small theatre, but assuming it transfers to the West End (as surely it must) it will still be well worth seeing in a larger setting. - Peter Grant
30 Jan 09
I must admit to being a little hesitant. Trevor Nunn is infamous for over-long productions - and recently over-long ones which aren't very good. Put that together with the fact that the quaint little Menier theatre is well known for having horribly uncomfertable bench seating - and it doesn't fill you with glee. However, even at three hours long - A Little Night Music was truly fantastic.
People were still casually taking their seats at just after 8pm (ignorant) which meant we didn't get out until gone 11 thus missing our train but it didn't distract from the fact that this was one of the best shows I've seen this year.
Well done - James Kent
28 Jan 09
The Chocolate Factory has undergone a transformation with the stage and the seating rotated 180 degrees. It has also somehow changed from a sauna, even in winter, to an icebox - although that is quite suitable for a Sondheim show as I find all his musicals suffer from an icy heart. A Little Night Music is more accessible than most, but as usual there is an element of style over substance, in this case an insistence that all the songs are written in waltz time. Unfortunately that means that most of the songs sound very similar with the exception of Send in the Clowns, beautifully performed by Hannah Wadingham and a song which makes no sense whatsoever outside the context of the show. Trevor Nunn's direction seems more suited to a larger proscenium theatre, an impression reinforced by our seats to one side where we felt disengaged from the performers who seemed to have forgotten we were there. However, it should be said that A Little Night Music benefits from an excellent book, adapted from Bergman, and some superb performances. Maureen Lipman is in full Edith Evans mode, Alex Hanson finds unexpected charm from Frederick and Hannah Waddingham is excellent as Desiree if perhaps a little too young and still glamorous (special thanks to the designer for the mirrored set when Ms Waddingham displays her ample charms to Frederick). Even Jessie Buckley holds her own, although unexpectedly her acting proves stronger than her singing, totally the reverse of her "Nancy" experience. I cannot say I have been converted to Sondheim but this show has increased my appreciation of his work. - David Baxter
28 Dec 08
A very enjoyable take on A Little Night Music; the chamber setting bringing out an intimacy in the piece. The first act's played a little slow, though this does mean that all Sondheim's delicious lyrics are audible; but the second act really comes to life. I was a little disappointed when the casting was announced, but admit to being wrong, they do a great job and Hannah Waddingham and Alex Hanson are wonderful.
- dgr1
23 Dec 08
This is an exquisite production of one of Sondheim's most deceptively difficult scores. By reverting to the character ages in the original Bergman film(i.e. younger than we're used to), Trevor Nunn has ensured that this is also something of a revelatory staging. The performances of Hannah Waddingham, Alexander Hanson, Gabreil Vick and Kelly Price are particularly superb, while Maureen Lipman is utterly perfect as Madame Armfeldt. I found Jessie Buckley a bit irritating (more than the character requires) but she does show real promise. All in all, this is a must see. - ajh
18 Dec 08
Oophs! Calm down Joe it's only a blog. As I said before it's not the scale of the production I am referring to but something else an energy and an enthusiasm which the performers on Broadway have, they really do give it their all. Perhaps it's in the blood? Perhaps it's just the American way? But whatever it is and where ever it comes from they deliver it in spades. It's that dynamism which would make what many consider to be good here look rather second rate there. And if that happens to be sneering then so be it, but it was not my intention - it's just a fact. Now don't be rude Joe...and calm down! - rds
09 Dec 08
Rather patronising, RDS - or, rather, rds as you're obviously a pretty lower case person ... wouldn't you say most posters on the WoS site are theatre buffs who are likely to have visited Broadway? I lived there (or at least in Manhattan) and could point out that the average Broadway theatre is 50 to 75% larger than the average West End one, and the average ticket price is 50% higher. So from the outset production budgets tend to be two to two and a half times the equivalent of putting something on in London, and tend to favour production values and special effects over scalable acting or the subtleties of an un-miked production. Both have their place of course, but it seems unnecessarily sneering to value Broadway so highly over London's West End. - Joe Volpe
09 Dec 08
There is an edge to Broadway which anyone who has been there will know exactly what I mean, they give absolutely everything to the part. It really doesn't happen as often as that here. That excellence, from all involved, is what defines Broadway and it really isn't anything to do with the scale of a production either. As for Mr Sondheim being brought to tears twice. He is a very witty man, perhaps he was just being ironic? And yes it was freezing the night I went, but warmed up after the first couple of hours or so! - rds
09 Dec 08
Firstly, take a coat. The theatre is absolutely freezing. Probably due to the dry ice that lingers in the air helping to create the very real twilight effect.
Overall, I thought the production worked really well. It does feel a bit long though - even in the first half which is odd as it omits My Husband The Pig which featured in the National production.
Interesting that Nunn reinstated Silly People in the second half. It is quite unnecessary to have two servants' songs in my opinion. However, I actually think that Silly People is better placed and more relevant than The Millers Son. That is not to say that The Miller's Son is not fantastically sung, just that at that point in the show I think we have already had a servant's POV and it interrupts the main story (we are almost three hours in by now remember.....)
I do not understand rds's comments about the quality of performance vs Broadway, talk about a sweeping generalisation. I thought the performances were uniformly good - I must mention the three male leads (who everyone seems to forget.) All amazing.
Only gripe about this show - the ending leaves a bitter taste in my mouth. As far as I can tell, Frederik is too weak to leave Ann and only ends up with Desiree because his son has run off with his wife. I would not be happy if I was Desiree. Sloppy seconds and all that...... - Mistertonymac
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