Synopsis Gregor Samsa is a travelling salesman until, that is, the day he wakes up as a gigantic insect. So begins Berkoff's exploration of Kafka's surreal tale. In a world where money and work are God, this play reminds us the human spirit should not be taken for granted. Conjuring up explosively theatrical world with daring aerial physicality, the acclaimed production combines a mind-bending, gravity-defying split-level set and an original score by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis.
Oh yes, the bug is indeed back. If you missed this physical theatre adaptation of Franz Kafka’s “six-legged nightmare” in its two previous seasons at the Lyric Hammersmith, don’t make the same mistake again. Co-adapted and co-directed by Lyric artistic director David Farr and Gisli Orn Gardarsson of pioneering Icelandic theatre company Vesturport, the piece remains a weird and wonderful delight.
From the wordless ten-minute opening sequence - showing the mundane daily routines of the Samsa family – to the shattering aerial conclusion 85 interval-free minutes later, both set to the haunting music of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, Metamorphosis never ceases to both mesmerise and unsettle.
Bjorn Thors has scuttled into Orn Gardarsson’s shoes (?) as the transformed Gregor, climbing the walls and dangling from the ceiling with breathtaking agility. Fellow Icelanders Elva Osk Olafsdottir and Unnur Osp Stefansdottir have taken over as Gregor’s mother and daughter alongside the always reliable Tom Mannion as his alarmed father, while Jonathan McGuinness reprises his role as potential lodger Herr Fischer, whose horror condemns Gregor to his fate.
- Terri Paddock
NOTE: The following FOUR-STAR review dates from October 2006 and this production’s original run at the Lyric Hammersmith.
Gisli Orn Gardarsson doesn’t look much like a spindly-legged insect. A tall, muscular gymnast with the regulation number of limbs for a human being, he doesn’t easily elicit the physical disgust expressed by other characters in this adaptation of Franz Kafka’s novella. One should not, of course, to be too literal-minded in the theatre, especially in a show part-produced by the recklessly innovative Icelandic company, Vesturport. Nevertheless, anyone coming fresh to the story, unless they read the “Body Politics” section of the informative programme, might not be aware of the specific nature of Gregor Samsa’s transformation.
But for director-adaptors Gardarsson and David Farr this might not be much of a problem; they clearly do not want the audience to lose sight of Gregor’s humanity or of the idea that Kafka may have been dealing metaphorically with the alienation of certain groups in society. In fact, they drive this home perhaps too insistently in the final stages, suggesting that Kafka, who wrote Metamorphosis in 1912, was foreshadowing the Holocaust which would destroy many members of his family. He himself died of tuberculosis in 1924.
Vesturport - here in partnership with the Lyric under Farr in his first season as artistic director - has acquired a name for exciting, physical theatre by taking cheeky liberties with classic texts. Circus skills, gymnastics and unexpected musical choices gave Romeo and Juliet (Young Vic and Playhouse) and Woyzeck (Young Vic /Barbican) a particular irreverent spice. This time, Gardarsson employs his gymnastic skills to great effect to show both the pain and pleasure of movement in his insect form. Death signified by hanging in a length of circus silk (known as a tissu) is something we’ve seen before, but it still has a kind of poignant dramatic flourish.
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, composers for Woyzeck, contribute brilliantly to the tension of Gregor’s story. Their rippling, plucking sounds combine gentleness with a sinister quality which is matched in Hartley T A Kemp’s lighting. Borkur Jonsson’s set design, showing Gregor suffering in his room (which we see from the perspective of the ceiling) while his family attempt to regain normality downstairs, has just the right claustrophobic respectability.
While Kafka gives us a person enduring unimaginable horror, a stage adaptation can’t help but put more emphasis on the way others attempt to deal with what has happened to him. The rest of the cast, especially Nina Dogg Filippusdottir as Gregor’s sister Grete, first sympathetic and then murderous, rise to the challenge magnificently. This is a riveting piece of theatre, capturing some of the same weird fascination found in Kafka’s story.
I saw this at The Lowry and was amazed by the sense of the power of difference, isolation and shock. I wish it was available on DVD. - akaty
06 Feb 11
No dissent from the reviews below. Vesturport give us 85 minutes of action that's sometimes hilarious, sometimes heart-wrenching but always compelling, in a production that's rather like Bjorn Thors - absolutely no fat on it. To dovetail this surreal tale of transformation and alienation into the impending Holocaust is a masterful move, giving the entire experience a dark driving force. But, as I said, it still raises a good few laughs too. I'm no Nick Cave fan but here he has co-authored a perfect score that marries beautifully with the action. - Sycamore Flint
22 Jan 08
I've got to agree with rds. Bjorn Thors brings a new vulnerability to the role of Gregor Samsa. This is a brilliant production with an awesome Nick Cave soundtrack. I'm glad the Lyric brought it back so I could see it. - Neil, London
16 Jan 08
STUNNING! Just get a ticket and be amazed. It is one of those plays that in the wrong hands could be awfull, but instead this brilliant Icelandic company have conjured up the surreal world of Franz Kafka to perfection. The cast are mainly Icelandic except for Tom Mannion as the father, and Jonathan McGuinness playing three roles most notably Herr Fischer, the arogant lodger. Both actors fit perfectly within this company. I won't spell out the Icelandic cast members names as my keyboard doesn't pocess the characters to do so! But suffice it to say they were all exceptional, but it is Bjorn Thors' night. He turns in a masterclass in physical acting. His antics as the cockroach are death defying, and he seems to effortlesly bring to the stage what would ordinarily seem only possible on the big screen. He should be allowed to take a solo bow. I know it is a company piece, but his performance is so stunning that he deserves that recognition. Well done to the Lyric for bringing this wonderfull piece of theatre to London. - rds
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