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Synopsis King Lear divides his Kingdom between his daughters according to a declaration of their love for him. His eldest Goneril and Regan exaggerate their affection and inherit. His youngest daughter Cordelia speaks only the truth and is banished. So begins the tragedy of King Lear, whose dignity, sanity and finally life are torn from him by a self-seeking younger generation, ambitious for his power. What is love, what is madness, what is truth - Shakespeare explores these questions together with many others in King Lear, widely considered to be his greatest tragedy.
Sir Ian McKellen completed an extraordinary journey this week (28 November 2007, previews from 14 November), when he brought his King Lear, directed by his long-time friend Trevor Nunn, triumphantly into the West End (See 1st Night Photos, 29 Nov 2007). The transfer follows an initial run last spring at the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon and an international tour that’s caused ticket frenzies in Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and the US.
Tickets for the limited season to 12 January 2008 at the West End’s New London Theatre – where it runs in repertory with Nunn’s cross-cast production of Chekhov’s The Seagull, opened to the press the night before – sold out long ago and are now only available via ticket touts and ebay.
First announced more than two years ago, the McKellen-Nunn King Lear was scheduled as the ultimate production for the year-long Complete Works Festival at the RSC, where Nunn was previously artistic director. However, its April opening was derailed when actress Frances Barber, who plays Goneril (and Arkadina in the Chekhov), was injured in a cycling accident (See News, 10 Apr 2007). Though its press performance delay to 31 May displeased critics at the time, it did nothing to diminish audience enthusiasm and demand for tickets.
First night critics were left amazed at Nunn’s “undoubtedly impressive” production, not least because of McKellen’s success in portraying the troubled King “with clarity and intelligence” as well as showing the character’s “emotional vulnerability”. However, critics also acknowledged that the production is no star vehicle alone, but ultimately the collective triumph of a talented ensemble that now “works like a well-tempered machine”. Amongst the supporting performances of note were Sylvester McCoy’s “beautiful” but “bumbling” Fool, Romola Garai's “highly affecting” Cordelia, Frances Barber “husky, hissing” Goneril and Jonathan Hyde’s “excellent” Kent.
Heather Neill on Whatsonstage.com (four stars) - “The first thing to be said about Trevor Nunn’s production for the Royal Shakespeare Company is that it is the clearest version of this play I have ever seen; the director has put all his energy into revealing rather than decorating the text. The result is an emotional journey of extraordinary power. We are spared nothing; even the hanging of Lear’s Fool (Sylvester McCoy as a diminutive professional comic) is made explicit. Cruelty is the norm in this tough world. King Lear is a star role and it is starrily filled on this occasion, but Ian McKellen is also part of an ensemble which - after many months playing in this country and on a world tour - works like a well-tempered machine … Frances Barber makes a lustful, self-serving Goneril … Monica Dolan’s Regan takes orgasmic pleasure in the blinding of Gloucester … Jonathan Hyde’s Kent is noble to the point of ultimate sacrifice for his master and Ben Meyjes’ Edgar is transformed from bookish reclusiveness to fighting machine.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times (five stars) - “This is a superlative performance from McKellen that has lost nothing with its transfer from Stratford to London. Its centre is Lear’s question: ‘Is there any cause in nature that makes these hard hearts?’ At the time the white-bearded king is putting a stool on trial in the belief that it’s his daughter Goneril. But McKellen delivers the line gently, quietly, and lingers over the word ‘hearts’ in a wondering, interrogative way, as if belatedly discovering that such an organ exists – and exists in him … Above all, McKellen manages to exude vindictive fury while finding inside himself a concern, a care, a love that’s evident when he kisses Sylvester McCoy’s bumbling old Fool, or cradles William Gaunt’s sobbing Gloucester, or, now radiating a touching simplicity, is reconciled with Romola Garai’s sturdy Cordelia ... Christopher Oram’s set, reminiscent of the balcony of an old theatre, cracks and splinters – symbolising the mind, family, kingdom, planet and universe that Nunn’s revival is evoking so memorably.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “Trevor Nunn's tendency to long-windedness also encumbers his art. Brilliant though they often are, I have rarely seen a Nunn production that didn't feel at least 20 minutes too long … There is, however, no doubt that Nunn has developed an acting ensemble with strength in depth, while Christopher Oram's designs are at once simple, grand and evocative. Ian McKellen charts every stage of Lear's terrible journey with clarity and intelligence and his relationship with his spoon-playing Fool, acted with a beautiful mixture of sad wit and manifest love by Sylvester McCoy, forms the emotional heart of the play, although the awakening scene with Romola Garai's Cordelia is also highly affecting. But, while I have no objection to the scene in which McKellen's Lear exposes his private parts in the storm, the later moment when he clutches his crotch and pointedly says ‘every inch a king’, eliciting ribald laughter from the audience like some end-of-the-pier comedian, strikes me as unforgivably vulgar.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail - “This is a good Lear. Possibly a great Lear … As few who see it may be able to forget, it is also a Lear in which Britain's Leading Actor, one of those ageing thesps who loves to bare his dewlapped torso to national view, goes one stage further and drops his moorings altogether. Egad! Cometh the naked hour yesterday, eyeballs bulged … Dramatically, the nudity may not have been so huge, but Sir Ian is an immodest Lear in more serious ways … Sir Trevor Nunn melds the traditional with the gimmicky … Frances Barber gives Goneril a husky, hissing voice, dry as a cobra's hood. But do she and her stage sister Monica Dolan (Regan) overdo the malevolence? At times they were almost in ugly sister territory rather than affairs of geopolitics and competitive love for the bastard Edmund (Philip Winchester, whose verse-speaking is a touch jerky). The action rushes along, sometimes at the expense of audibility. An excellent Kent (Jonathan Hyde) and Edgar (Ben Meyjes) give it the feel almost of a thriller. Romola Garai's Cordelia is willowy and decent. Gloucester himself is given the full Stratford treatment by William Gaunt, an actor so orotund he could have a career in airline adverts.”
Claire Allfree in the Metro (four stars) - “Nunn’s King Lear hits the ground running with a magnificent opening scene and then goes from strength to strength … McKellen’s Lear excels at combining a myopic fury with an intellectual curiosity and emotional vulnerability. This is a Lear with a profound capacity for love … Other cast members bring a similar depth and texture. Monica Dolan’s Regan borders on the insane; Guy Williams is a richly nuanced Cornwall; Frances Barber’s Goneril is scheming, desperate and vengeful … Christopher Oram’s architectural set disintegrates bit by bit as the play’s world grows ever darker, suggesting the collapse not just of a once-great civilisation but of civilisation itself. There’s a state-of-the-nation urgency about this production and a terrible, unconsoling finality. Edgar’s last words, spoken in a godless place in which he is utterly alone, have rarely sounded so fearful and bleak.”
Tickets for Ian McKellen’s Lear are changing hands for inordinate sums on ebay. Pay whatever you must. This is a performance not to be missed.
The stage at the New London Theatre mimics the thrust of the Courtyard in Stratford, where this production began. A background of seedy opulence, perhaps a theatre, perhaps a palace in decline, lowers over Christopher Oram’s Russian-flavoured design. This sense of the end of an Imperial era might be caught from the play in repertoire with this King Lear - Chekhov’s The Seagull - but it is not too insistently pursued.
The first thing to be said about Trevor Nunn’s production for the Royal Shakespeare Company is that it is the clearest version of this play I have ever seen; the director has put all his energy into revealing rather than decorating the text. The result is an emotional journey of extraordinary power. We are spared nothing; even the hanging of Lear’s Fool (Sylvester McCoy as a diminutive professional comic) is made explicit. Cruelty is the norm in this tough world.
King Lear is a star role and it is starrily filled on this occasion, but Ian McKellen is also part of an ensemble which - after many months playing in this country and on a world tour - works like a well-tempered machine.
Nunn has emphasised Shakespeare’s interest in what is natural, on the nature of human nature. While other directors have found Christian redemption, he sees (and this is expanded on in an illuminating discussion between Nunn and the scholar James Shapiro quoted in the programme) a dismissal of religion which at the time when Shakespeare was writing would have been daring indeed. If everything depends on human relationships, the breakdown of love and respect within families becomes ever more painful. Goneril and Regan fulfil their expected roles in the opening scene of pomp and pretentiousness; Cordelia, behaving more naturally, is punished for undaughterly behaviour.
Frances Barber makes a lustful, self-serving Goneril who is nevertheless deeply hurt by her father’s horrible curse of barrenness. Monica Dolan’s Regan takes orgasmic pleasure in the blinding of Gloucester. Both, given the chance, behave with their father’s imperiousness. Sweeping about the stage in their gorgeous silk gowns, these two exemplify with fierce accuracy the extremes of filial ingratitude.
Jonathan Hyde’s Kent is noble to the point of ultimate sacrifice for his master and Ben Meyjes’ Edgar is transformed from bookish reclusiveness to fighting machine. It’s typical of the production that, although he defeats Edmund (Philip Winchester) in heroic fashion, he has to be dragged away from attacking his opponent’s eyes in recompense for the blinding of the father they share. Edgar becomes Poor Tom so completely that it’s possible to believe that his father would not recognise him and William Gaunt’s Gloucester is a fine foil for McKellen.
And at the centre of proceedings is McKellen himself. He begins as a physically frail monarch who has little experience of anything except getting his own way. His dawning understanding of what it is to be human, which leads both to his ability truly to love Romola Garai’s fervent Cordelia and to his journey through madness to enlightenment, provides an emotional rollercoaster for the audience. The few moments of nudity are essential to the expression of his complete vulnerability, a bare forked animal portrayed here by a prince among performers.
- Heather Neill
NOTE: The following FOUR-STAR review dates from June 2007 and this production’s original run in Stratford-upon-Avon.
So here it is at last - the distinguished thing. Nine weeks later than promised after a fall put co-star Frances Barber out of action, the overwhelming question inevitably is: has this King Lear been worth the wait?
Director Trevor Nunn - who scaled the theatrical heights here more than 30 years ago when he worked with Ian McKellen on the landmark RSC production of Macbeth - does not storm the heavens here. But this is a fine production, beautifully designed and lit, with a commanding central performance by McKellen.
In a prefatory scene freighted with pomp and religiosity, McKellen, resembling a Russian Orthodox priest, blesses the assembled court. Lear, we surmise, is not a worldly man. And so it proves. The question "who am I?" becomes in this production the leitmotif as Lear embarks on a journey of discovery and enlightenment.
As has been pointed out, there are many Lears and inevitably not all of them can be realised by a single performance. Ten years ago, Ian Holm gave us a man with deep-banked fires. McKellen here is far milder, as the storm scene demonstrates. But he beautifully charts the king's spiralling descent into madness and pathos.
Like Holm, McKellen follows the logic of the text by baring himself, stripping away the remnants of dress and decorum as he searches for "the thing itself".
There's a sense of strength throughout the casting with fine supporting performances by Jonathan Hyde as Kent, Julian Harries as Albany, Guy Williams as Cornwall and solid ones by Barber as Goneril, Monica Dolan as Regan and William Gaunt as Gloucester. I was less taken with Sylvester McCoy's Fool, too many of whose lines pass for too little, a consequence both the rapidity of their delivery and the decision to set many of them to music.
The production suffers somewhat from the thrust design of the stage with the action often feeling a little removed. But Christopher Oram delivers a literally, mightily impressive set, a colonnaded balcony festooned with scarlet swags, while Neil Austin's atmospheric and beautifully modulated lighting is immaculate.
This King Lear is better by several country miles than the RSC's last two productions of the play. Ultimately, it may not wring the withers but it is a substantial achievement.
I woke up this morning a little bit annoyed. Last night I went to see King Lear. Ok, ok..Mr.McKellan's "Lear" swooped and soared, but it seemed to lack the gravitas it deserved, maybe even the physical presence. It was a detailed and layered performance that, I am sure, would have been rewarded and appreciated greater in a more intimate venue. However, the reason for my annoyance was that his efforts were let down very badly by his supporting cast. Most notably Philip Winchester's hammy, rushed and self-indulgent interpretation of “Edmund” - about as sinister as Lionel Blair with a water pistol! How on earth he got the part I do not know. I guessed it was for a bigger role in The Seagull - No! I am thinking recent stints in Hollywood movies such as "Thunderbirds" and more recently "Flyboys" opened the doors. Come on RSC, don’t go down that road. By "Now Gods, stand up for bastards" it was on the floor! Other performances also left a lot to be desired - Francis Barber was having a signature w*** through the play as "Goneril". It was a demonstration from start to finish. And sadly Ramola Garai's (wonderful in "Inside I am dancing") “Cordelia” was over-acted and lacked any great truth. Trevor Nunn has to take a lot of the blame for this. Also, the set was mediocre and uninspiring. Thankfully the quality of acting increased when characters such as "Gloucester"- a wonderful William Gaunt and Guy Williams' brutal and unforgiving "Cornwall" took stage. A support to bolster up Mr.McKellan's performance would have painted a different picture. And also would have put me be in a better mood writing this today. - JMG
09 Jan 08
The West End is suddenly awash with notable Shakespearean productions. Trevor Nunn's RSC transfer is very impressive but, as always with Nunn, feels overlong, particularly in the first half (God knows how long Gone With the Wind will be). Ian McKellen brilliantly conveys the senile brain-addled king but there is little sense of the greatness there must have once been to inspire such love and loyalty from Cordelia, Kent and Gloucester. In fact the strongest performances in an excellent ensemble come from Jonathan Hyde and William Gaunt as the two elderly dukes. Gaunt would probably make a wonderful and regal Lear himself but I doubt he will be given the opportunity. - David Baxter
12 Dec 07
Best thing I have ever seen on stage...would highly recommend to anyone. - vixma
09 Dec 07
Best thing I have ever seen on stage...would highly recommend to anyone. - vixma
09 Dec 07
I was lucky enough to see this production in Stratford earlier in the year so was very excited to see what the intervening months had done to emblish this production still further.
Be in no doubt this is a definitive King Lear. Ian McKellen was born for this part and words cannot express just how incredible his performance is. In the months since I first saw him as Lear, Mckellen seens to have grown into the part and really understands what makes Lear tick. There are so many great scenes - two in particular stand out - one where he meets the blinded Gloucester is full of compassion, one where he awakes to meet Cordelia again brought me to tears, it was so beautiful. This is the best performance of McKellen's distiguished career.
And its not all about him. There is a fine ensemble of actors helping to make this a superb production. Look out especially for William Gaunt who delivers a beautifully balanced Gloucester, Frances Barber who does evil like no other, Romola Garai's wonderfully obserbed Cordeila, a fine and strong performance from Ben Meyjes as Edgar and in fact strong performances throughout.
Superb staging, I was especially impressed by the storm scene and the costumes are simply divine. Frances Barber's wardrobe in particular must be one of the best I've seen. She must have felt she was in heaven when she first saw it ;-)
If Ian McKellen and others in this company do not win the awards they deserve, there will be no justice in the world.
This is truly GREAT theatre and I am honoured to have witnessed it. - Paul Wallis
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