Synopsis In 1945, a young airman jumps to certain death from his burning aircraft, addressing his last words to June, a girl he has never met. Following an angelic blunder, caused by a classic English pea-souper, Peter Carter miraculously survives and finds June in the flesh. But things are not so simple. To stay alive, Peter is forced to take himself, and the heavenly authorities, to the Universal Court of Appeal. Part of the Travelex £10 Season
National Theatre artistic director Nicholas Hytner has attacked critics by calling them misogynistic “dead white” men following unflattering overnight reviews of A Matter of Life and Death directed by Kneehigh artistic director Emma Rice, which opened last Thursday (10 May 2007, previews from 3 May).
Hytner told The Times today that most of the veteran male critics who wrote for daily newspapers were unable to see past the gender of female directors such as Rice (See Today’s Other News). According to Hytner, “it’s fair enough to say that too many of the theatre critics are dead white men.”
Based on Powell and Pressburger’s classic 1946 film, A Matter of Life and Death follows the romance of radio operator June and war pilot Peter who, having cheated death after jumping from a blazing plane, must plead his case for life in a heavenly tribunal. It’s adapted by Tom Morris and Emma Rice, who also directs. The cast features Tristan Sturrock (as Peter), Lyndsey Marshal (June), Douglas Hodge and Theatre Vesturport’s Gisli Orn Gardarsson. The second production in this year’s Travelex £10 Season in the NT Olivier, A Matter of Life and Death runs in rep until 21 June 2007.
While all reviews were quick to compare the stage version with the film original (in most cases considering the latter superior), the overall critical consensus seemed unmoved rather than scathing, with only two critics conducting a direct assault on the Rice and Morris adaptation.
Michael Coveney for Whatsonstage.com (three stars) – “There’s no faulting the ambition, or the exuberance, of this spirited adaptation for the National, in association with Kneehigh Theatre, of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 1946 movie which was part technical fantasia, part love story and part Shavian debate in a celestial court of law. It is just a little hard, sometimes, to see the point of it all. Morris and Rice create a uniform phantasmagoric world of bicycling nurses – at one point pedalling upside down to reveal a frantic line of threshing thighs and white stockings – and pyjama-clad male hospital patients. The action sags a little in the course of two-and-a-quarter uninterrupted hours, but there’s no question that customers in the continuing £10-a-ticket Travelex season will feel they have good value.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (one star) - “Adaptors Tom Morris and Emma Rice have torn the heart, soul and magic from Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's famous fantasy film of 1946. They have transformed A Matter of Life and Death into a finger-wagging, pacifist sermon, as if victory over Hitler in 1945 was a source of shame not joy. Morris and Rice's adaptation is a glossed-up, flamboyant piece of physical theatre, the film's atmosphere of visionary strangeness sent up by actors climbing ropes, fires burning in buckets, bedsteads on ropes and a line of nurses frantically bicycling while horizontal in bed. Do not ask how or why these nurses are so portrayed, since Rice's production keeps subordinating sense to meaningless spectacle and flickers of comic amusement. Rice's grim, new Matter of Life and Death is fit for mercy killing.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (three stars) – “The 1946 Powell-Pressburger movie, on which this show is based, was an optimistic paean to passion. Tom Morris and Emma Rice, as co-adaptors, have transformed it into a pessimistic assault on the random brutality of war. The result is a fascinating reappraisal of the original work, flawed only by a lack of narrative dynamic. The meaning is clear: war will always triumph over private passions. What prevents this seeming a bleak coda is the way Rice's production brims with an urgent sense of life.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Time (two stars) – “I’m hard-put to explain the nurses who lie on beds pedalling on upended bicycles, but, like the aerial cavortings that follow, they are presumably meant to create a sense of surreal wonder. The piece needs that sense because it is less exceptional than it seems. I liked the stylised ping-pong Hodge plays with Marshal’s June — but not enough to feel I was watching a play that mattered.”
Siobhan Murphy in Metro (four stars) – “There’s a slightly overwhelming amount of ingenuity in the staging: fire and smoke, swinging beds, large-scale projections and song-and-dance numbers vie for attention. But the darker messages woven into this tale, strong performances and sharp humour imbue this production with enough heart to ensure it’s more than just high spectacle.”
Christopher Hart in the Sunday Times (two stars) – “It might have been great. Sadly, it isn’t. More of an extravagant mess. The overall impression is of a story line struggling to breathe beneath layers of exaggerated theatricality laid on with a trowel. Desperately striving to avoid the plodding and the prosaic at all costs, Rice and Morris achieve not the unforgettable fairy-tale magic and melancholy of the film, but only gaudy spectacle and even silliness.”
There’s no faulting the ambition, or the exuberance, of this spirited adaptation for the National, in association with Kneehigh Theatre, of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 1946 movie which was part technical fantasia, part love story and part Shavian debate in a celestial court of law. It is just a little hard, sometimes, to see the point of it all.
Tom Morris and director Emma Rice have taken the outline of the story and reinvented the central image of the stairway to heaven as a mobile parabola resembling the London Eye. A fighter pilot, Peter Carter (Tristan Sturrock) has bailed out of his flaming aeroplane without a parachute after being talked into survival mode by a wireless operator, June (Lyndsey Marshal) on the ground.
In the film, Kim Hunter’s June was American and David Niven’s dashing pilot a true-blue smitten Briton whose affair somehow represented the Anglo-American alliance at the end of the war. Here, the liaison is purely romantic, and the whole production posted as a dream ticket to immortality, conceived by Carter lying in a coma and tickled into theatrical reality by the manic interventions of a Norwegian illusionist (Gisli Orn Gardarsson, co-founder of the Icelandic company Vesturport) and the urgent encouragement of his neurosurgeon (Douglas Hodge).
Marius Goring played an outrageous French aristocrat in the film, sent by heaven to get Carter and place him before the tribunal. The stylistic masterstroke was to have the real world presented in Technicolor, while heaven had to make do with black and white, presumably because the money had run out. Morris and Rice create a uniform phantasmagoric world of bicycling nurses – at one point pedalling upside down to reveal a frantic line of threshing thighs and white stockings – and pyjama-clad male hospital patients. The crash is signified by a flaming bucket, an image that is brilliantly replicated all over the stage in a finale evoking the destructive bombing of both Coventry and Dresden.
The action sags a little in the course of two-and-a-quarter uninterrupted hours, but there’s no question that customers in the continuing £10-a-ticket Travelex season will feel they have good value. The on-stage band led by composer Stu Barker provide some gorgeous, lilting tango music, and the ensemble dance sequences (staged by Rice with choreographer Debra Batton) are as delightful as they are surprising. The whole show is an ingenious deployment of resources that replaces the stark, stylish wittiness of the movie with a more all-purpose melancholic mood of pro-life, anti-war poeticism.
A small-scale 1994 King’s Head musical version by Thomas Morgan and Kevin Metchear made a virtue of trying to do the impossible, which is somehow more exciting as a theatrical tactic. But it is a measure of the audacity and confidence here that the flying rope tricks, the swinging bedsteads and the regulated ensemble work all come out of a well prepared dramatic context. And when we arrive in heaven, the lights come up on an audience ironically supposed to be asleep or half-dead.
Tristan Sturrock is a plucky, engaging Carter, while Craig Johnson chips in with a perky performance as his already deceased co-pilot Bob Trubshaw. Lyndsey Marshal is an affecting June and Douglas Hodge really does drive things along just as they seem to start stuttering.
This is a real treat - a kaleidescopic nad surreal masterpiece that manages to have heart and soul. Based on Powell and Pressburger's innovative film masterpiece this production uses Aerial work, choreography, projections and live music and song to create teh forties mood. The two lead performances are astonishing teh production is very funny and moving. Emma rice has done a fantastic job adapting and directing this piece and has created something new for the stage. You laugh, cry ,think and are moved - what more could you ask for? Awesome - Kneehigh are the new complicite! - Tim Armitage
11 Jun 07
I went to see this with an open mind and now regret the loss of two hours from my life! No one seems to mention the technical failure of this show, I don't mean the set etc which worked perfectly well but the soundscape! The almost constant 'back' music covers most of the dialog even though there are obvious mike leads taped to the nape of everyones neck and lyrics are blurred to the point of being inaudible. This, added to the fact that I didn't give a damn about any of the characters - who thought that perfomance by 'Harold' should be on the NT stage, it would have embarrased Bridlington? - and the bikes were simply annoying and overused. What on earth made Nick Nytner go to bat for this plucked turkey??? - Another dead old man
08 Jun 07
Well, I'm more with the 'Sunday ladies' than the 'Old white men', though it's certainly not up to Kneehigh's usual magical standard. I loved the last 30 minutes, but it took a long 90 minutes to get there. If only they had shaved off 30 minutes.....still, the usual Kneehigh inventiveness is there - the use of bicycles and hospital beds in particular - and who can regret going to a show with a dead Norwegian magician who flys and where Shakespeare's ruffles are inflated white rubber gloves! Douglas commands the difficult Olivier stage better than most but all the other central performances are very good. Definately worth seeing. - Gareth James
08 Jun 07
I'm amazed at all the vitriol here. I loved this production--endlessly inventive, fresh, exhilarating. I'd never seen the film before, but watched it a couple of weeks ago, and found it tedious, wooden, and completely uncharming. So, as far as I was concerned, Kneehigh was perfectly free to do whatever they wanted with it. No one should go to this expecting a replication of the original (thank heavens, say I), but on its own terms I thought it was first-rate. - Charles
06 Jun 07
Probably the worst evening I have ever spent in the theatre. Tedious, pretentious, self-regarding and, in its final stages, offensive. The adolescent mentality of the adaptors was totally unable to comprehend the qualities of the original and the complexities of the period from which it sprung. If my companion had not been grimly determined to sit it out to the end I would have walked out half way through and thus been spared the excruciating scene in which a Coventry blitz victim blamed Peter Carter for the bombing of Dresden (yes, really). Avoid, and spend your money on the DVD instead. - Will H
01 Jun 07
It appears to have all been said here already, but here's my two peneth anyway. I gave 2 stars, for and out of generosity, to the stage hands who manage the complex staging and flying in this production, and also kept my waning interest going in this otherwise mismash of a show. If there had been an interval I would have left as I am sure half the audience would too. I saw the film many years ago, and although my memory is stretched, the production bears little resemblence to the original. It is in short a travesty. And again I find myself asking how it got this far. The answer is very simple. Mr Hytner has been in New York, again, trying to get another of his pet projects in the running for a Tony. Unfortunately, it wasn't to be this time as the otherwise stunning NY production of Coram Boy (better than the NTs) had to close early. So so reviews meant not enough Broadway punters wanted to risk there hard earned $s. Anyway, now that's over Nick get yourself back to your full time job as the "Conductor" of the NT and sort this mess out! - rds
01 Jun 07
£10 that I'll never get back.
It's one of my favourite films of all time but this was a shoddy mess. I'd like to describe it as interesting but it's more pitiful.
That anyone could even consider substituting the Marius Goring version of the Conductor with the simpering moron that this version presents shows you how deeply flawed this is.
Spend your £10 on the DVD and have a faar more entertaining evening at home.
AVOID! - QuincyMD
30 May 07
hugely enjoyable - as long as you haven't seen the film.
which most of the population hasn't.
- j
29 May 07
A deeply disappointing evening, from which the magic and delight of a classic film is almost entirely absent (the only exceptions being straight transpositions from the original). The directors aim for romance, comedy, tragedy and musicality: sadly, they fail on all counts. Douglas Hodge's brave attempt to rescue a truthful performance from the wreckage of the script is the sole redeeming feature - hence a single star. Not worth even £10 and 140 minutes of your time. Rent the film instead. - Stuart
28 May 07
Iloved the film and I loved this show as well. Wisely the adaptors did not seek to reproduce the film and created an original piece of theatre while retaining the heart of Powell and Pressburger's story. Having read the damning review from Mr De Jong in the Standard I went along with low expectations and was pleasantly surprised. The relationship between June and Peter was genuinely passionate and moving. After a series of theatrical miscastings (Titus Andronicus, Sky Masterson) Douglas Hodge was back on form and perfectly cast as Frank. I loved the energy of the rest of the company. It was my first visit to a Kneehigh production and I regret that I missed the others. On the night I went the audience reaction was enthusiastic and you could sense genuine enjoyment. If you were in two minds about going to see this ignore the "naysayers" and book your tickets. The best £10 I have spent for a long time! - Diane
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