Synopsis Based on the same story as filmed in Sommersby which was the remake of Le Retour de Martin Guerre. Set against the Catholic/Protestant troubles in France, Martin Guerre is trapped in a marriage of convenience and disappears one day to the war. He returns after many years - but is it really him? Originally opened in London (after some delays) in 1996. After a short while, some bad reviews and falling audiences it underwent substantial re-write and re-direction before re-opening 11th Nov 96. Winner of 1997 American Express Award for Best New Musical.
The impostor who takes the identity of another man – and his place in his wife’s bed – sounds like the stuff of legends. But Martin Guerre is based on a real court case tried in France in 1560. Boublil and Schönberg’s fleshing out of the bare facts resembles a tabloid story – or even a Jerry Springer scenario – although presumably nowadays, DNA testing could detract from the tension!
Les Mis aficionados might wonder how this epic musical can work in an intimate auditorium with actor/musicians replacing the orchestra. It’s hard to imagine a more effective staging or orchestration than Craig Revel Horwood’s fast-moving punchy production and Sarah Travis’ stunning arrangements for just 12 astonishingly versatile performers.
And thanks to Diego Pitarch’s artful use of the tiny Watermill stage, there’s a terrific sense of claustrophobia about this Pyrenean village that looks like a Brueghel painting, peopled by diehard bigots determined to keep the land Catholic by inheritance (and out of Protestant hands), even if it means forced marriages.
That’s the fate of Bertrande, desirable both for her beauty and her land, but not to her unwilling husband, the frankly weedy Martin Guerre. She’d gladly endure him, if only to stop the villagers’ cruel gossiping when there’s no heir, but Martin can’t bear to touch her. So he flees to the wars and apparently miraculously reappears seven years later as a handsome muscular hunk with the hots for Bertrande. She may not believe her luck, but she doesn’t kick him out of bed either. All might end well, but she has a disappointed admirer who discovers the happy couple are closet Protestants…
Religious hate provides an effective backdrop, and if events seem as lurid as a period horror movie, complete with authentically dirt-besmirched peasants, it only adds to the storytelling.
There are wonderful moments, often because the actors are playing instruments. Kelly O'Leary’s sultry, repressed Bertrande wistfully plays her cello as Martin rejects her in song; Michael Howcroft’s celibate Priest fingers the curves of his instrument. Andrew Bevis’s Martin is a gloriously pure tenor and Ben Goddard’s ardent impostor is a believable hunkier version. There’s a real sexual charge when he and Bertrande circle each other in a first dance.
Karen Mann, Rosie Timpson and Susannah Van Den Berg relish their show-stopping “Sleeping on our Own”, three widows reminiscing about the ups and downs of the marriage bed! Though the rest of the driving insistent melodies and simplistic lyrics don’t do it for me, the great storytelling does – and, on the night I attended, the audience gave the show a deserved standing ovation.
With the passage of time I had forgotten how much I hated this show first time round. But hearing of the Watermill's revival I thought it was worth another shot. How wrong I was, what a load of twaddle it all is. Just about one tune that sticks, now irritatingly, in the mind. I guess the composers were trying to follow on with their huge success with Les Mis, but this is no Les Mis. There was talk a while ago that Cameron Mackintosh, reluctant to conceed deafeat, was going to revive it with new songs. Well he seems, sensibly, to have let that idea die. I cannot fault the enthusiasm and talent of the cast though who were exemplary with such execrable material. Given the tiny space the director and designer have to work with at the Watermill they did a fantastic job. The Watermill is a wonderfull theatre and even this nonsence cannot dent its huge reputation. Boublil & Schonberg had another disaster recently on Broadway with their equally dire The Pirate Queen. Perhaps it is now time for them to pass the baton on? Let's hope they bury Martin Guerre once and for all! - rds
01 Sep 07
I think 5 stars is a little over-the-top! It has always been an under-rated show and the Watermill's chamber style suits it, though I'm not sure the actor-musician approach does, perhaps because Craig Revell-Harwood doesn't have the magic touch of John Doyle. At the performance I saw, there was some ragged singing and playing, and the circle seats don't allow you to get as involved. I have only seen Watermill productions before on larger West End stages; at their home base it seems rather cramped. I'd like to see it again in a bigger space and in a better seat. - Gareth James
05 Aug 07
Fantastic production, well staged in such a tiny theatre. I hope it will tour. - Judith Spencer
28 Jul 07
As good as it gets. You will not see a better staged show than this outside of the West End. - NKC
20 Jul 07
Just wonderful! That's all I've got to say really. - eloise
Started in 1967 this venue combines a producing theatre situated in an old Victorian paper mill, and excellent restaurant in a tithe barn and fabulous grounds. The 200 seater theatre, described as the most idyllic theatre in the country, is one of the most successful producing venues in England, regularly transferring shows into London's West End and New York.
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