Synopsis Lorca offers his poetic and disturbing personal vision of Spanish life in the 1930's. In a society where all weddings are blood weddings, this classical tragedy, starkly plotted, offers all the traditional elements of ill fated lovers and family feuds.
Two months after the National revived The House of Bernarda Alba, the final instalment in Federico Garcia Lorca’s famous Andalusian trilogy, comes the Almeida’s presentation of the first play in the triptych, Blood Wedding – and the contrasts are striking. While Howard Davies’ production of the former, in a fresh translation by David Hare, strove for naturalism, the latter is highly stylised.
That stylisation is not entirely a production choice, although director Rufus Norris and adapter Tanya Ronder do much to heighten it. Lorca was a celebrated poet as well as a dramatist and a close associate of other Spanish avant-gardists like artist Salvador Dali and filmmaker Luis Bunuel. His original script for this 1933 play, about a bride who runs away with her former lover on her wedding day, includes large chunks of verse, injections of music and characterisations of Death and the Moon.
In an introduction to the new playtext, Ronder pinpoints the perennial problem with translations of this and other Lorca plays – in English, his fiery Spanish passion can easily sound melodramatic. She has risen to the challenge, which she likens to “skinning eels”, admirably. Her pruned-down version retains some beautifully crafted phrases (“My son’s from good seed…. His father could have planted me a whole crop of sons” boasts the mother of the groom) but releases primary poetic responsibility to the production as a whole.
On that front, as one would expect of the multi award-winning director of Festen, Norris scores top marks for invention. On Katrina Lindsay’s bare set, lace curtains provide a veil behind which much of the action is silhouetted – even in moments of celebration, the characters appear as mere shadows of themselves. The effect is made all the more startling by Tim Mitchell’s dramatic lighting, deepening into the bloody red of the title, while Paul Arditti’s soundscape of chimes, whistles and electric static enhance the feeling of other-worldliness.
Less effective is Norris’ decision to enlarge the role of Death (Daniel Cerqueira), who stalks proceedings from the opening scene when, in Bunuelesque fashion, he walks on stage backwards, reverses his pinstripe jacket and slices himself out of a wig that covers his face. The trapeze risings and fallings of the Moon (Assly Zandry), naked but for some glitter paint, also feel excessive.
Of course, no disrespect to Lorca or Norris, but it’s the casting that’s assured this Blood Wedding was a sell-out months before rehearsals even began. As Leonardo, the play’s only named character and the one who drives the tragedy, Motorcycle Diaries star Gael Garcia Bernal is a little firecracker; but, though engaging, the part demands a more explosive impact than he seems able to bring to it.
Elsewhere, Norris has assembled an intriguingly international cast – including Dutch Thekla Reuten (as the fiery Bride), Icelandic Bjorn Hlynur Haraldsson (the handsome Groom), Irish Rosaleen Linehan (the constantly bereaved Mother) and English Lyndsey Marshal (the jilted Wife) – who prove adept at mining the piece for both its pathos and its poetry.
Pants. Wish I'd listened to addictedtotheatre. - 195.188.208.240)
13 Jun 05
The multinational casting, simple but stunning visual effects and potent use of music gave Lorca's difficult rural tragedy a universality that it doesn't always achieve. Tanya Ronder's terse translation may miss some of the poetry of the original but is still very effective. Gael Garcia Bernal may be only one in a clutch of strong performances but he proves his mettle as a stage actor (he has an unexpectedly resonant voice for stage work) and, on a shallow note, he is jawdroppingly beautiful! Without him, this probably wouldn't be the sell out that it is of course, but Rufus Norris proves yet again that he is a director of striking originality and vision. An obscure but powerful treat. - 195.82.123.181)
31 May 05
As a Spaniard myself,I think that no translation can give justice to Garcia Lorca poetic and dramatic spanish.Also the production fails in all counts to mirror the atmosphere of the hot southern spanish sun and caracters.The casting of Gael Garcia Bernal,much trumpeted and sure sell-out,is completely wrong.A failure....in my view. - 195.194.75.209)
17 May 05
Having witnessed the rubbish of Bernarda Alba at the NT (surely produced by British tourists on holiday at the Costa del Sol!) this is truly a breath of fresh air. It was outstanding, the production digs at the heart of the play and it takes all sorts of risks to bring it to life. Well done! And shame to all the other cynical productions more concerned with appealing to the middle ground. This is one of Lorca’s hardest plays to stage, and the Almeida’s production makes it resonate. - 195.92.67.70)
15 May 05
A highly inventive production - stylised rather than realistic - which holds you from beginning to end. It's not a star vehicle but an ensemble piece and the 'cocktail' of Mexican, Dutch, Icelandic, Irish, Welsh, Portuguese, English et al turns a latin smoulderer into an anywhere tale. More true to the spirit of Lorca that the National's Bernarda Alba, yet a fresh perspective on the play. - 81.134.196.124)
15 May 05
A Bloody Waste. I was resolutely unmoved by this production. The translation was more poetic than the David Hare go at 'Bernanda Alba' but the director threw in so many silly theatrical flourishes that the text was lost. Throw in some very strange performances by a cast that have a wide range of accents (Irish, Portugese, even Icelandic) and you have a less than evening that reminds one of a student production. Bernal was completely wasted, and again a strange (not Hispanic) accent that made him swallow the end of his words. Sell your tickets and save your money. - 86.129.111.160)
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