Synopsis A landmark in the history of English literature. Jane simple governess, wins the heart of Edward Fairfax Rochester, the brooding and mysterious master of Thornfield Hall. Questioning the boundaries of class and gender, it is one of the most heartrending and powerful tales of romance and suspense ever told. Studio 1
Almost ten years after its premiere at the Young Vic in 1997, Polly Teale’s Shared Experience production of Jane Eyre returns to London at the Trafalgar Studios – that uncomfortable arena erected in the shamefully desecrated art nouveau Whitehall Theatre – and gathers force the longer it goes on.
And it does, I’m afraid, go on for rather a long time. Three hours of writhing and plangent cello music is about two and a half hours more than I can usually tolerate, but the performance is so strong, and the high points of Teale’s directing so vivid, that I must concede the show a victory on points, if not a knock-out.
The Trafalgar management must be hoping that Charlotte Bronte’s ever popular novel will draw the crowds for the summer, and two of the original cast, Monica Dolan as the penniless orphan Jane and James Clyde as the Byronic, dastardly Mr Rochester, return with renewed confidence to roles which offer them as much technical scope as emotional challenge.
The main theatrical innovation is the suggestion that Rochester’s mad first wife is a symbol of Jane’s suppressed eroticism. Thus Dolan’s grim, hatchet-faced exterior is twinned from the beginning – somewhat confusingly – with Myriam Acharki’s wild-haired Bertha in her flame orange taffeta dress doing some performance art on an upper level.
Neil Warmington’s design of a curved staircase leading to the secret door expresses the idea perfectly, and the conventional treatment of the rest of the narrative feels like a duty to be dealt with rather than part of the central thrust. There is not much feeling of local atmosphere in the episodes with Rochester’s illegitimate daughter Adele (Octavia Walters), or the chance encounter with the vicar’s sisters who turn out to be Jane’s cousins, and her salvation on the moors.
But the evening bursts into sensuous life with an interjected idyll in Jamaica that is like the volatile awayday to Havana in Guys and Dolls, and the catastrophe of the fire is ingeniously done by the six multi-tasking actors who flutter handkerchiefs like ashen remnants. John Lightbody, Sarah Ball and Joan Blackham all make significant, and versatile, contributions. The reunion of Jane and the incapacitated, redeemed Rochester is as moving as the convent scene in Cyrano de Bergerac.
The feminist deconstruction of the Brontes has long been an academic hobby, and Teale has extended the campaign into the theatre with notable dedication. Since Jane Eyre, she has won an Evening Standard best director award for her staging of Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargossa Sea, a prequel to Jane Eyre that Shared Experience re-worked as After Mrs Rochester, and last year’s Bronte took on the entire literary sisterhood, and brother Branwell.
Fans of the show will need no second bidding, and lovers of the book will find plenty to challenge their own interpretation of a mythical romance that never palls.
Good effort. Charlotte would be spinning in her grave if she knew! Where did that dog come from?! - 71.226.88.38)
15 Aug 06
Amazing performance,the dance scenes-the mystical music and burning Thornfeild-so intense.Jane,Bertha and Rochester are amazing!!!!
- 82.10.157.108)
13 Aug 06
If I could give this show 20 out of 10 I would. I have never seen better. Jane Eyre is wonderful! - 193.128.60.132)
08 Aug 06
This is a very faithful literrary adaptation and therefore does tend to lose dramatic momentum in places. I was also not convinced by the idea that Jane has a wilder alter ego; Monica Dolan is more than capable of portraying the passion inside the prim Quaker exterior. The matinee was not helped by the curse of the dreaded school trips; constant background noise and giggling at inappropriate moments.
At its' best though this is a compelling version of a timeless classic. The ensemble are committed to the piece (although I could have lived without the actor playing the dog) and the two leads are exceptional. Monica Dolan, who is the image of a young Imelda Staunton, perfectly captures the character of Jane and is barely off the stage for the full three hours; James Clyde is genuinely emotional, particularly when Rochester has been brought down by events and has to accept his reliance on Jane for his future. - 62.6.139.13)
13 Jul 06
I have always loved the novel, so was a little nervous of how it would be portrayed. I have to admit, it had never occurred to me to view the 'mad' Mrs Rochester as the untamed side of Jane (and therefore, I suppose, Brontë herself), but it was a very interesting idea. Monica Dolan was excellent as Jane, though I was somewhat less taken by James Clyde as Mr Rochester. But I was thrilled by Shared Experience's innovative and energetic approach, and will be looking out for their future productions. - 83.104.38.117)
27 Jun 06
This is THE character for Pearl Marsland..... Wish to see her more often - 82.227.142.141)
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.
Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best
for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.