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Synopsis After civil war Messina seems to have returned to peace with few casualties and a courtship holds the promise of reconciling the battle of the sexes in a well matched wedding. But the reconciliation's have been too hurried and soldiers can't return to the civilian world overnight.
Zoe Wanamaker and Simon Russell Beale teamed up at the National Theatre last night (18 December 2007, previews from 10 December) to tackle the roles of warring lovers Beatrice and Benedick in artistic director Nicholas Hytner’s new production of Shakespeare’s comedy Much Ado About Nothing, which runs in rep in the NT Olivier until 29 March 2008 (See News, 15 Feb 2007).
Along with the recent West End openings of Ian McKellen in Trevor Nunn’s RSC King Lear and Chiwetel Ejiofor, Ewan McGregor and Kelly Reilly in Othello at the Donmar Warehouse, the highly anticipated pairing of Wanamaker and Russell Beale has been credited with making Shakespeare as popular – if not more so – than pantomime this Christmas in London.
Nicholas Hytner’s “shining”, “exuberant” and “alluring” production won rave reviews from the overnight critics, whose raised expectations of the “glorious” lead casting of Simon Russell Beale and Zoe Wanamaker were more than met. More than one critic declared Russell Beale’s “disenchanted” portrayal the best Benedick they’d ever seen, while Wanamaker’s “wonderfully expressive” Beatrice also won favour. What’s more, the fiftysomething “age of the actors actually adds to the pleasure and point of the piece”. Beyond the leads, the supporting cast contains “barely a weak link”, with Oliver Ford Davies' particularly impressive as a “towering” Leonato. In short, “This is a Much Ado to be treasured.”
Maxwell Cooter on Whatsonstage.com (five stars) - “Simon Russell Beale’s Benedick in particular is a portrait of the disenchanted soul. He’s the archetypal middle-aged man, the life and soul of the party whose bonhomie disguises an underlying unhappiness … He also has the build for the part - this is the first production I’ve seen where you can actually believe that Benedick is the trencherman that Beatrice implies he is … Zoe Wanamaker’s Beatrice, too, is not the usual merry quipster. She exudes a bitterness right from the start; this is a woman who has, as she sees it, lost her chance at love and now lives uncertain of her role … Wanamaker’s naturally husky voice also helps. She drips scorn in the direction of Benedick, a man who has seriously wounded her. None of this is to say that Hytner’s production is shot through with gloom. On the contrary, the comedy is far from neglected and, with a better than average Dogberry and Verges, courtesy of Mark Addy and Trevor Peacock respectively, there are plenty of laughs to be had … Vicki Mortimer’s simple design, based on a slatted screen and a revolving stage, is expertly employed … This is a Much Ado to be treasured. You can’t help but believe that this Beatrice and Benedick belong together. It’s a salutary reminder that, whatever our age, there’s hope for even the most bitter of misanthropes among us.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (four stars) – “The virtue of Nicholas Hytner's shining production is its ability to strike a balance between the play's disturbing qualities and its touchingly funny study of two natural singletons achieving maturity through love. Part of Hytner's success lies in creating a genuine world on stage … Simon Russell Beale's Benedick is a bookish, bachelor-soldier whose carapace of certainty is invaded by a certain self-doubt … It is a brilliant comic performance that shows the transmogrifying power of passion … This is a production that gets most things right. Oliver Ford Davies' Leonato is a man driven into a towering, Lear-like rage by the accusations against his daughter's honour. Far from being a self-conscious clown, Mark Addy's Dogberry is also a self-important local constable who takes himself seriously and is thereby all the funnier … Hytner gives us a real world occupied by recognisable people. And if there is one moment to treasure it is when Wanamaker announces she is very ill. ‘Serve God, love me and mend,’ says Russell Beale with tenderness that suggests we are watching two people who have achieved genuine self-awareness. This confirms that we are watching a Much Ado that is not only funny but that also reaches into human experience.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “In this wonderfully funny, but also deeply touching production, the age of the actors actually adds to the pleasure and point of the piece … Both actors suggest a sense of clenched and sterile misery beyond their sparkling but defensive wordplay … The director also has a brilliantly comical coup de theatre up his sleeve in these great scenes of deception. I long to describe it but it would be unfair to do so … Russell Beale is in his element as Benedick, relishing the comedy, but also bringing a suggestion of gnawing regret and lack of confidence to the role … And Wanamaker, with her gawky body and wonderfully expressive jolie laide face, conveys all the ardour of Beatrice, whether in love, or in her fierce anger over the betrayal of her cousin Hero. There is barely a weak link in the supporting roles with an especially fine and moving performance from Oliver Ford Davies as Hero's initially urbane and later agonised father. Hytner's outstanding period-dress production is marred only by an ugly revolving wooden set. But the night will be chiefly remembered for Wanamaker and Russell Beale, two glorious actors capturing the wonder of love in middle age with unforgettable tenderness and humour.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (four stars) – “Zoe Wanamaker and Simon Russell Beale make a far bigger and better splash in Nicholas Hytner's alluring production of Much Ado About Nothing than I dared hope … Hytner's production bursts into exuberant, situation comedy … Designer Vicki Mortimer locates the play in a strange no man's land. The costumes mix 16th and 19th-century styles. Attractive, white-washed Sicilian houses are foregrounded by a revolving stage on which are placed hideous, wooden, vertically slatted screens and a paved walkway - all fresh from Heal's, I guess … Wanamaker's dazzling, fiftysomething Beatrice appears a vinegary, cynical outsider in her own family. She greets Russell Beale's comically swaggering Benedick, sporting a pointed beard and pronounced air of condescension, with tart disdain. The key to this vulnerable Beatrice is her sad sense of being a middle-aged romantic on the shelf … Russell Beale, almost caught in the listening act, slips headlong into the pool and rises all wide-eyed, with the comic-pathetic astonishment of a man who cannot believe himself loveable, as he tries to swagger his way towards dry clothes. In this brief scene, the actor devastatingly captures the essential Benedick … It is Russell Beale and Wanamaker who make big, theatrical waves.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times (five stars) - “Not even Donald Sinden or Roger Allam, the finest Benedicks I recall, achieved as much as Simon Russell Beale does in Nicholas Hytner’s gently hilarious, subtly serious, always delicate revival of Shakespeare’s comedy. He nervously listens, then scuttles about Vicki Mortimer’s set — a box of slats within a Sicilian piazza — desperately convincing himself he’s avoiding detection. Then, finding nowhere else to hide, submerges himself in a pool from which he eventually emerges, a spoof Poseidon who has just triumphed over a shark. And when Zoe Wanamaker’s Beatrice appears to call him into dinner she stands bug-eyed with disbelief as this soaked lunatic poses, primps and swaggers like the lover he has suddenly become … These are terrific performances: both reminding us that a wary love abortively burgeoned between Benedick and Beatrice long ago … Thanks to some splendidly atmospheric music, and maids who sweep, scrub and occasionally canoodle, Hytner’s production has a warm and, defying the Olivier’s size, domestic feel. Moreover, Daniel Hawksford’s Claudio isn’t the usual smug pup but a shy, inexperienced boy genuinely appalled at what he sees as Hero’s betrayal, and Andrew Woodall is the best Don John I’ve seen.”
Much Ado About Nothing is a play that often relies heavily on the sparkling wordplay of the two main characters, the verbal sparring tending to mask the brutal treatment meted out to Hero. But Nicholas Hytner offers us something different in this superb production: a middle-aged Benedick and Beatrice who are far from happy with their lot, whose wit and jousting mask an insecurity and discontentment.
Simon Russell Beale’s Benedick in particular is a portrait of the disenchanted soul. He’s the archetypal middle-aged man, the life and soul of the party whose bonhomie disguises an underlying unhappiness. When he swears that he will never fall in love, one hears the sound of a man who protests too much. He also has the build for the part - this is the first production I’ve seen where you can actually believe that Benedick is the trencherman that Beatrice implies he is. The many references to his stomach are highly apt and the comic potential is played for all its worth.
Zoe Wanamaker’s Beatrice, too, is not the usual merry quipster. She exudes a bitterness right from the start; this is a woman who has, as she sees it, lost her chance at love and now lives uncertain of her role. When she dons a servant’s clothes, in order to spy on Hero and Ursula’s plotting, you sense that she’s not straying too far from her own position. Wanamaker’s naturally husky voice also helps. She drips scorn in the direction of Benedick, a man who has seriously wounded her.
None of this is to say that Hytner’s production is shot through with gloom. On the contrary, the comedy is far from neglected and, with a better than average Dogberry and Verges, courtesy of Mark Addy and Trevor Peacock respectively, there are plenty of laughs to be had.
Elsewhere, although Julian Wadham doesn’t quite succeed in tapping Don Pedro’s hidden sadness, Oliver Ford Davies is a superb Leonato. Full of fury with, at first, his daughter and then with Claudio for his treatment of her, this is an old man seeking to recapture past glories and full of hurt.
Vicki Mortimer’s simple design, based on a slatted screen and a revolving stage, is expertly employed. There’s also excellent use of an ornamental pool. I particularly like the way that Leonato and Hero eavesdrop on Claudio’s act of penance, mirroring the way that Benedick eavesdropped on the plotters. Perfectly handled.
This is a Much Ado to be treasured. You can’t help but believe that this Beatrice and Benedick belong together. It’s a salutary reminder that, whatever our age, there’s hope for even the most bitter of misanthropes among us.
Given that Marianne Elliott, and Associate Director at the National, brought her sensational production of Much Ado to London last year, it is perhaps surprising That Nick Hytner has sceduled it again so soon. The obvious draw is the pairing of Zoe Wanamaker and Simon Russell Beale as Beatrice and Benedick. Both are excellent but the first half comedy is not as uproariously funny as the RSC version and SRB's air of charming campdoes not fit entirely well in this context. In contrast, Act 2 which focusses on Claudio and the grievously wronged Hero is brilliant. The performances of Oliver Ford Davies, David Hawksford and the beautiful Susannah Fielding are exceptional. What a dramatic improvement Miss Fielding has made since she was miscast in The Rose Tattoo last year, she is now a talent to look out for. Unfortunately the design imposed some appalling sightlines, the second time a Hytner production has suffered from this irritant - as Artistic Director he should know better. - David Baxter
22 Mar 08
For a student, the idea of sitting through another Shakespeare play was chliling. How oft must we see actors either too old and too dull to negotiate the set, or too young and vapid so that they much less interact as stand on stage eyes to the sky recalling some words they dont quite understand...its a wonder there are any of us youngies left that understand that when things are good... theyre very very good. And this play was FANTASTIC! SRB has the ease and grace of someone half his age, and I still managed to fall in love with him. Zoe wannamaker endures dubious writing in 'my family' weak after week, so to see her on form was brilliant. The rest of the cast, not only a delightful surprise as each entered and made us laugh, or want to boo and hiss as if we were in the yard ourselves. LOved the setting, the lighting was great, Pool. say no more. The only complaint I have is those damn mobile phone people. Suspend reality for three hours... nothing is that important! Final thoughts: a must-see; thankyou to greenwich university for organising such a wonderful night at the national! - Sarah W
17 Jan 08
Its probably just me but I dont understand all of this five star business. This production is ok and thats about it. It boasts two brilliant central performances from Wannamaker and Russel Beale but I felt the production didnt truly serve the play. Particularly the beggining, this is supposed to be a joyus sun kissed return of the soldiers, instead I felt like I was watching a play set in soviet Russia. Obvious use of a pond in the middle of the stage also left me cold, it was funny once but dont repeat it.
- Dave
11 Jan 08
After last year's deeply satisfying RSC 'Cuban' Much Ado, I wasn't sure I wanted to see it again so soon, but the combination of Nicholas Hytner directing and Simon Russell Beale / Zoe Wannamaker as B&B was irresistible and how glad I am I succumbed to temptation. This will go down in history as one of the great interpretations of Shakespeare. Sometimes you absorb only a portion of Shakespeare's verse, but here you relish every word. There are laughs where you don't normally get laughs. There are deeply moving moments when the auditorium is perfectly silent. It zips along but you don't lose a thing. There isn't a fault in the casting (Mark Addy and Trevor Peacock as Dogberry and Verges is luxury casting indeed) and of course the two central performances exceeed our expectations bigtime. To see just the head of an actor, acting with his eyes alone, bring the house down is seeing a master at his craft. The chemistry between them is terrific. Hearing the cheering of youngsters at the end made me jealous that I had to wait so long into adulthood for stuff like this but thrilled I live in a country which now makes quality like this accessible to kids. Perfection. - Gareth James
11 Jan 08
I don’t normally take time to review pantomimes, but I had to share my excitement over the wonderfully produced and executed panto, Dick Whittington at the January 5th Hackney Empire theatre (matinee). To put it bluntly, I thought I’d seen it all in the way of panto, as a school teacher who makes annual pilgrimages to pantos with his students, I had no appetite to see yet another one. So I went, (more like was dragged) half kicking, half screaming, by my wife who frankly, wouldn’t shut up about Sophia Ragavelas. My argument for not going was simply this; if Sophia was really that special, she couldn’t possibly shine in a panto as my wife alleges she did starring as Sophie in Mamma Mia. After all, how much can one shine amidst a bunch of slapstick with the occasional song and dance routine thrown in between custard pie gags?
Firstly, no matter how predictable or formulaic the genre, this production was a refreshing reminder that well-timed jokes, well-sung songs and well-danced dances are still a delight. Sophia Ragavelas is the consummate performer who sings and dances as if she were imported from some fairyland of perfectly polished panto performers (pardon the alliteration). Even though this panto was the furthest thing from provincial community theatre, it might as well have been when contrasted with Sophia’s unique presence. My comments are not meant in any way to belittle the other cast members, but rather reflect my diminished capacity as a writer after still suffering from the stunned state Sophia’s performance left me in.
Anyone attuned to the finer points of theatre, or for that matter, anyone with working eyes and ears, must admit that the performance of Sophia was ethereal. Her singing was effortless with a refined yet full, richly textured and surprisingly powerful voice. Her movements and acting the personification of refined grace, and her overall likeability is something, I doubt not even as good an actor as she, could fake. I am an inventor, and my next invention will be to invent an automatic boot programmed to kick me in the backside every time my wife reminds me of my missed opportunity to se Sophia as Sophie in Mamma Mia. My only consolation is that she is supposedly starring in a production of Never Forget at the Savoy theatre in May of 2008. I plan to be one of the first to attend, and my wife will not need to drag me this time. It is said that in art, there is no small thing. Sophia left no stone unturned/unexplored as she poured every ounce of her abundant talent into her role, elevating the genre of panto to an art form I didn’t think possible, until now.
I’d love to write more, but I have to go to my workshop now, and get to work on my automatic kicker.
Sincerely,
Timothy Winey
- Timothy Winey
06 Jan 08
A total joy. A demonstration of what the National can still do when on top form. It almost goes without saying that Simon Russell Beale and Zoe Wanamaker were superb - they seem born to play these roles - but special mention must also be made of the magisterial Oliver Ford Davies as Leonato and Mark Addy as Dogberry. This production, wonderfully directed by Nicholas Hytner, is both highly comic and deeply serious and works at both levels. A must for all lovers of Shakespeare and/or REAL theatre. - sc
05 Jan 08
I must have been at the wrong theatre? I cannot believe all these 5*s. For starters Simon Russell Beale is far too camp for the part. Giving him cheap stunts to perform like the pond scene may appear fun, made less effective by Ms Wannamaker repeating it - eliciting more of a groan than the intended laugh the night I was there, but doesn't make up for failings in the chemistry between the characters Beatrice and Benedick. Never has a title conveyed so much about the production - much ado about nothing. Just because some of the greats from the past have played these parts well into their dorage doesn't mean we have to do the same today. There are some wonderfull young actors around who would really bring these characters to life - come on NT give 'em a chance! - rds
28 Dec 07
This is a deep and thoughtful Much Ado.
Beatrice and Benedick possess a maturity which allows them to bring a refinement to their characters and the play is all the better for it.
I am a huge fan of both Simon Russell Beale and Zoe Wannamaker and they combine brilliantly here - well studied performances which leads you to suggest they share a disenchantment with their lives and genuinely don't see why each would love the other. When Simon Russell Beale says "Love me.... why?" it is a classic comedy coment but also shines a light into Benedick's soul. He does not see himself as someone who could be loved.
There are some very funny scenes and the comic timing of these two is great. Look out for the pool scenes. Wonderful!
And lets not forget the rest of the cast. Oliver Ford Davies, Mark Addy, Trevor Peacock...... all provide strong support.
A great festive treat - go see! - Paul Wallis
21 Dec 07
We saw the RSC Tamsin Greig/Joseph Millson production in January this year, so it was with some trepidation that we went to the National to see this one -- surely it couldn't be as good? Well it was, it was fabulous, and how refreshing to have these older lovers played by older actors. It was a very different production, but that worked to its advantage. It's so exciting that Shakespeare's words lend themselves to such different -- but equally valid -- interpretations. Wanamaker and Russell Beale must be among our very best verse speakers in this country, and their superiority and experience shone through. Lovely, funny, very moving in parts. And 10/10 to Mark Addy and Trevor Peacock for making Dogberry and his sidekick Verges genuinely funny for once -- not an easy task. I'm seeing it again with the WOS outing, and can't wait. - LDE
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