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Synopsis Swordsman, poet, philosopher, Cyrano de Bergerac. His musketeer-heroics combine with rapier wit, but the bravado belies a passionate love for his exquisite cousin, Roxane. Too ugly to win her for himself, or so he thinks, he agrees to woo her on behalf of another. His tender verse gives voice to the inarticulate, dashing Christian, gaining him her heart just before both men depart for war. A wildly romantic story laced with swagger, gallantry and sacrifice. Part of the Travelex £10 Season
Dates: Opens 19 April 2004. Apr 10,12,13,14,15,16,17,20,21,22,23,24,26,27,28,29,30, May 1,3,4,5,6,7,8,10,11,12,13, Jun 3,4,5,7,8,18,19,21,22,23,24 at 19:30. Apr 19 19:00. Apr 24, May 1,5, Jun 5,8 Mats 14:00
Here’s something I never quite understood: nose aside, if his skill as a poet is one of the key traits that sets Cyrano de Bergerac apart, why does everyone around him also speak in verse? Even if his rhymes were a thousand times more accomplished, how much more sensible and effective if his supposed inferiors simply stuck to boring old prose?
Of course, neither adaptor Derek Mahon, designer William Dudley nor director Howard Davies can be blamed for a decision taken by Edmond Rostand in his 1897 original, in which the nasally disfigured Cyrano uses his wordplay to help the doltish but handsome Christian win the heart of his own true love, Roxane.
However, there are other faults with this new version that can only be laid at the door of the creative triumvirate. The first in this year’s Travelex £10 season in the Olivier, Cyrano de Bergerac has been brutally stripped down here. Forget the 3-D video projections with which he’s excelled in recent years, Dudley’s skeletal design resembles an unclad set for Stomp. The huge steel climbing frame and two gangways into the stalls may be functional, but they feel distinctly unfriendly and under-utilised.
Much of the evening’s humour arises from the calculated anachronisms in Irish poet Mahon’s translation, but it’s not always welcome. References to mineral water, eco-friendliness and euros jar, while crude lines such as “As for the nose, I’d sooner lose my dick. / Besides, the women like it when I lick” do the actors that must utter them few favours. Perhaps it’s not their fault that so many in the company seem ill at ease with such verse-speaking.
According to a programme note, Davies’ intention with all of this is to scrape “away the surface romanticism of the play”, but is this wise with the ultimate romantic swashbuckler? In any case, I fear he’s scraped too far beneath the surface and robbed the play of just about any heart whatsoever.
On a more positive note, Christopher Bruce’s choreography and Dominic Muldowny’s music produce two lovely set pieces – in the fencing room and on the battlefield - and, as Roxane, Claire Price proves incandescent despite a miscast Zubin Varla, who’s not nearly stupid enough nor pretty enough to convince as Christian. (In fact, after his own prosthetic nose turn in last year’s Midnight's Children for the RSC, Varla’s a much more likely candidate to play Cyrano himself one day.)
Though the vehicle may be questionable, it is wonderful to see Stephen Rea back on the London stage, and he strikes some moments – particularly in the seduction by proxy balcony scene – that make you want to forgive all others in a production that seems somehow at odds with itself.
Well worth missing. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.0.8.20)
22 Jun 04
My "enjoyment" of the play was marred by Stephen Rea's almost non-existant voice. It sounded like it was about to go at any moment. Painful. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.74.202.254)
09 Jun 04
Dreary, uninspired stuff - no set, no life, no point. Even though it pains me to say this after nearly 20 years theatregoing at the National - AVOID!!! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
08 Jun 04
Like other reviewers, I left at the interval on the basis that if, by then, the production hasn't grabbed me, it never will. This was just a dull dull reading of the play. A low-key Cyrano is a contradiction and it doesn't work. All characters were skin deep. The variety of accents left you at sea as to where you were supposed to be. The actors were not helped by a pointless set and a translation which was so unsure of itself that it had to resort to cheap jokes and wince-making anachronisms. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
05 Jun 04
Although there is much to like in this production - the barracks sword fight, the war scenes, uniformly good acting,and the use of music - both the translation and the design are misguided and try to do something to a play that needs nothing doing to it! Still, Mr Davies and Mr Dudley are right 99.9% of the time, so we can excuse the odd mistake. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (172.172.121.247)
04 Jun 04
The stark set was imaginative and required a little imagination from the audience, which is not too much too ask - or have our brains become as much the couch potato as our behinds?
The familiarity of the story made this more palatable than it might have been for a more mysterious piece. The choreographed dance and music sequences worked wonderfully.
The length of the first half was something of a chore and the references to modern technology and the Euro seemed unnecessary, though amusing on occasion.
It is a little cruel to criticise Cyrano for being long: There is a lot of it. However, a lead the audience could warm to, and believe to be endowed of wit and charm, would have made all the difference. Mr Rea, despite his extremely hard work and, doubtless, vulnerability, was not the right man for the part. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.144.228)
12 May 04
Yes, it's true... this is the one 'blip' in the current £10 season, and that's a shame because Nick Hytner's record has been largely faultless. Although the show is not as dreadful as some reviewers have suggested here, the rhyming couplets often grate, the set was grim and uninspiring and the whole thing is too damn long by at least 30 minutes. My friends and I (10 of us, no less) braved it out until the bitter end - but I could hear one of them urging Stephen Rea to hurry up and die in the final scene. To be honest, if it had taken longer, I would have jumped down from the Circle and stabbed him myself. Andrew B - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.130.127.205)
12 May 04
Hmm - first show at the National I have ever left half way through. Uninspiring in the extreme. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.43.174.41)
11 May 04
The production opened promisingly with some well choreographed dance and music and an impressive fight sequence. This however, lapsed into a series of longwinded verbal exchanges that was hesitant and faltering due to the inconsistency in the rhyming prose and out of context references. It was difficult warming to the characters. Rea's Cyrano lacked the charisma and wit he was famous for. Roxane came across as plain and self-centred. Christian just got on the nerves. A poignant battle scene livened the play somewhat before we came to Cyrano's final scene in which he rambled on for so long it seemed he would never die. The play was well produced with a good support cast, but tried to be overly clever with the writing and felt an hour too long. The mish-mash of dance, music and drawn-out dialogues left the audience as bewildered as the play itself. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.33.199.34)
06 May 04
The production opened promisingly with some well choreographed dance and music and an impressive fight sequence. This however, lapsed into a series of longwinded verbal exchanges that was hesitant and faltering due to the inconsistency in the rhyming prose and out of context references. It was difficult warming to the characters. Rea's Cyrano lacked the charisma and wit he was famous for. Roxane came across as plain and self-centred. Christian just got on the nerves. A poignant battle scene livened the play somewhat before we came to Cyrano's final scene in which he rambled on for so long it seemed he would never die. The play was well produced with a good support cast, but tried to be overly clever with the writing and felt an hour too long. The mish-mash of dance, music and drawn-out dialogues left the audience as bewildered as the play itself. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.33.199.34)
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