Synopsis After civil war Messina seems to have returned to peace with few casualties and a courtship holds the promise of reconciling the battle of the sexes in a well matched wedding. But the reconciliation's have been too hurried and soldiers can't return to the civilian world overnight.
The Royal Shakespeare Company’s now-annual winter West End residency opened at the Novello Theatre last week (13 December, previews from 7 December) with Marianne Elliott’s 1950s Cuba-set production of Much Ado About Nothing, which was seen in rep at Stratford’s Swan Theatre from May to October (See News, 25 Aug 2006), starring Tamsin Greig and Joseph Millson as warring lovers Beatrice and Benedick.
First night critics felt that this Much Ado has transferred well from Stratford to the London stage, and all were impressed with the performances of the central duo, who they described as not only a great comedy act, but a strong pair capable of conveying the pain of rejection as well as the joy of passion. While some reviewers loved the Cuban setting and felt it added to the heat at the core of the play, others found it pointless and were unconvinced by Elliot’s decision to relocate the comedy from Sicily.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (4 stars) - “Much Ado stands or falls by its Beatrice and Benedick, and here the RSC has come up trumps…. When Greig’s Beatrice brutally commands Millson to come into dinner through a megaphone, he will not be put off his self-deceiving conclusions: ‘There’s a double meaning in that.’ All the big laughs are in place. Those central duping scenes have to be done with freshness and spirit beyond hitting the right notes. Millson plays his to perfection, while Greig, ‘running like a lapwing’ across the front of the stalls, sets off a motorbike horn, scrabbles about beneath a bench and finally stands dumbstruck at evidence of Benedick’s devotion. She is absolutely hilarious, and both she and Millson are sexy, attractive beasts at the onset of early middle age, adding poignancy to their denials of being in love…. The production was seen in the Swan in Stratford-upon-Avon earlier this year, but the transposition to the proscenium stage works perfectly well. Neil Austin’s lighting and Olly Fox’s music are important components of a joyous evening, one that is only available to the London public, alas, for a scandalously short time.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (3 stars) – “Thank heavens for Tamsin Greig! Her tight-skirted, melancholic Beatrice, who has left more than one flush of youth gracefully behind, is just the kind of cool woman to deliver winning shots in a sex-war. Her tongue serves as a sharp weapon in the battle of the sexes. It leaves Joseph Millson's pretty-boy Benedick, who basks in a perpetually extended adolescence, verbally mauled and reeling. Greig's performance has become the striking, saving grace of Marianne Elliott's spectacular, protracted production, set for no discernible military or political reason in Cuba 1953…. Salsa band music, an over-long masked dance-party, an atmosphere generated by cigar-smoking, boozy soldiers home from battle and elements of knock-about farce, all distract us from wondering when the Cuban aspect will assume relevance. It never does…. Nowadays directors emphasise Much Ado's tragic potential. Elliott accentuates the farcical, rather diminishes the serious…. This Much Ado opts for belly laughs rather than wit or pathos.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (4 stars) – “Elliott… creates a sexy southern sultriness in this joyous Cuban-based Much Ado…. One notices the awe, in this Fifties Batista dictatorship, with which Patrick Robinson's sternly militaristic Don Pedro is treated. Equally, it is moving to see how Morven Christie's wronged Hero finally flinches under the touch of the father who, in his rage, has wished her dead. But the play depends on the interaction between Beatrice and Benedick and here it is in perfect hands. Tamsin Greig's Beatrice starts as an Eve Arden type who delights in her ability to crack wise. She is also deliriously funny…. But Greig also shows how Beatrice's adamantine self-regard finally yields to the claims of passion. Joseph Millson is an equally fine Benedick…. Bette Bourne's sozzled, epicene Dogberry has matured since Stratford and there is good support from Jonny Weir as a darkly taciturn Don John and Nicholas Day…. But the joy of Elliott's production lies in its ability to capture the ecstasy at the heart of Shakespearean comedy, and my only serious complaint is that this magnificent production is on view for a month when it should be running for a year.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph – “After the disappointment of Merry Wives - The Musical, the RSC picks itself up, dusts itself down, and launches its London season in the West End with Marianne Elliott's tremendous Much Ado …. Elliott… brings an almost novelistic detail and richness to a comedy that in lesser hands can seem merely brittle and artificial…. It has also given Olly Fox the opportunity to write the most enjoyable theatrical score of the year, with an ace on-stage band playing deliciously blowsy old-time Cuban music…. Tamsin Greig and Joseph Millson…. constantly strike sparks off each other, creating an electric atmosphere in which elaborately defensive verbal sparring gradually gives way to a glorious glow of love…. Neither actor is conventional hero or heroine material. Millson initially seems both slobbish and gauche, while Greig is all sharp angularity and contempt, with a hint of the embittered spinster about her…. Hilarity gives way to the wonder of romance. And the gags are a joy…. There are many happy touches of classic Hollywood screwball comedy in this production…. Elliott also ensures that the subplot, in which Beatrice's cousin Hero is brutally rejected at her own wedding and accused of being a whore, is played absolutely for real, bringing a truly tragic edge to the piece…. There isn't a single weak link in a production that gloriously combines sparkling wit and emotional depth.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times (3 stars) – “This is a maddening production: silly at times yet hugely intelligent, miscalculated in places yet excellent at the centre. I’ve seen wittier Beatrices and Benedicks than Tamsin Greig and Joseph Millson…. but none who seethed and boiled more forcefully. From the first you’re aware that Millson is protesting far too much when he denounces marriage and, impelled by her insults and his own frustration, gets seriously angry at her. As for Greig, she’s tough, independent, and so packed with emotion both thwarted and aggressive…. There’s an equally rare electricity between these two. But then the doubts begin. Claudio is callow and callous, but he’s surely not Adam Rayner’s version of the character: the sort of mean, insolent monster you might have found, complete with dark glasses, in Batista’s secret police or torture chambers. This makes nonsense of an ending in which he repents and is happily re-accepted as a husband by Hero, in Morven Christie’s touching performance an unusually young, vulnerable and likeable girl…. Overall, there’s more good than bad egg here for any curate to eat.”
All the best productions of Much Ado – Zeffirelli’s Sicilian extravaganza at the National, Rachel Kavanaugh’s “Dad’s Army” version in Regent’s Park – create a resonating social canvas of soldiers on leave and love in the air, and Marianne Elliott’s beautiful, pungent RSC revival is no exception. Set in 1950s Cuba, before Fidel Castro, the design is no trite “concept” but a liberating, inspirational relocation.
Lez Brotherston’s South American setting has wrought iron balconies, grey distempered walls, peeling ceilings and a samba band setting a hot temperature from the off. It is all a bit like Evita, and indeed Jonny Weir’s impressively unhappy, bearded Don John is a malcontent radical who plays his dirty tricks and disappears, you feel, to become someone not dissimilar to Che Guevara.
His brother, the prince Don Pedro (Patrick Robinson) rules this Messina with a rod of iron, though authority has crumbled a bit along the line, as Bette Bourne’s magnificently debauched, semi-comatose Dogberry proves; the master of the watch is some weird mistress of the night, with a Bill Fraser-style corrupted Cockney accent, a poodle hair-style, a smear of lipstick and a liquor-sodden drawl. His every move, or lurch, is shadowed by Steven Beard’s sad little Verges, a neutered apparatchik trapped inside his master’s grotesque incompetence.
But of course Much Ado stands or falls by its Beatrice and Benedick, and here the RSC has come up trumps by importing the delightful Tamsin Greig from The Green Wing on television and matching her with Joseph Millson, a notably handsome rising star in the company. When Greig’s Beatrice brutally commands Millson to come into dinner through a megaphone, he will not be put off his self-deceiving conclusions: “There’s a double meaning in that.” All the big laughs are in place.
Those central duping scenes have to be done with freshness and spirit beyond hitting the right notes. Millson plays his to perfection, while Greig, “running like a lapwing” across the front of the stalls, sets off a motorbike horn, scrabbles about beneath a bench and finally stands dumbstruck at evidence of Benedick’s devotion. She is absolutely hilarious, and both she and Millson are sexy, attractive beasts at the onset of early middle age, adding poignancy to their denials of being in love.
False evidence of Hero’s alleged impurity is the counterbalancing dark side of the comedy and these scenes in the church, where Adam Rayner’s impassioned Claudio denounces Morven Christie’s translucent Hero, are beautifully done. The reconciliations include a show of Madonna masks, a deflation of Leonato’s (Nicholas Day) rage and grief and a swirling company dance that must be as enjoyable to perform as it is to watch. You can feel the audience going wild with delight.
The production was seen in the Swan in Stratford-upon-Avon earlier this year, but the transposition to the proscenium stage works perfectly well. Neil Austin’s lighting and Olly Fox’s music are important components of a joyous evening, one that is only available to the London public, alas, for a scandalously short time.
- Michael Coveney
Note: The following FIVE-STAR review dates from May 2006 and this production's earlier Stratford run.
The RSC Complete Works season finally bursts into glorious technicolour with Much Ado About Nothing, which, remarkably, in the hands of director Marianne Elliott, eclipses Gregory Doran's landmark production at the Swan three years ago.
The decision to set the play in 1950s Cuba, while in truth shedding little light, generates kilowatts aplenty, not least in some terrific communal Latinate cavorting, which, as performed by a crack cast, is utterly irresistible.
It is one of those productions which is so right in so many respects. My only cavil is that even the best efforts of Bette Bourne and Elliott cannot give the kiss of life to the wretched Dogberry who remains irredeemably unfunny.
But to harp, or even Harpo on this - this Dogberry has more than something of the vaudevillian about him - would be unfair. True, as performed by Bourne, this business seems to belong to another play, but the production is blessed with as fine a Benedick and Beatrice as you'll be fortunate to find.
Joseph Millson, a star in the recent Spanish Golden Age season, is simply sublime as Benedick, utterly in control of his material and conveying bewilderment and offended dignity like no one else. Happily, he is brilliantly partnered by Tamsin Greig (best known from TV's Black Books and Green Wing) whose need for love is buried deep under bomb-proof armour-plating.
It is said that a cynic is a disappointed romantic and what emerges from this production, as with Doran's revelatory The Taming of the Shrew a few years ago, is that the cynicism of Beatrice and Benedick is a front, masking, a fear of love and commitment, on Benedick's part, and a mixture of vulnerability and defiance of societal expectations on that of Beatrice.
What the production also brings out, through the character of Hero, is the way women are forced into roles and robbed of any self-autonomy; because Beatrice will not be a pawn, she must, perforce, be a shrew. This is underlined by the apparently benevolent manipulations of self-appointed puppetmaster Don Pedro, played by the fine Patrick Robinson.
Nicholas Day shines as a passionate Leonato, as does, literally, the stunning set by Lez Brotherston, a wonderful mixture of neon lights and decayed grandeur. Tribute, too, to composer Olly Fox and the musicians. Unmissable.
I truly cannot think of a better, more entertaining way to spend a wet Saturday afternoon in early January. I shed tears of laughter and joy at Grieg and Millson's fantastic performances and the music, dancing and inspired set all combined to leave me thrilled to have been in the audience. Definitely a winner. - 163.1.215.44)
08 Jan 07
Although my experience is fairly limited, this is the best Shakespearian production I have seen. It offers further confirmation that Marianne Elliott is a major directorial talent. Tamsin Greig and Joseph Millson are sensational as Beatrice and Benedick. Millson is particularly inspired during the scene where he is deceived into thinking Beatrice loves him - his whole performance seems to be inspired by Jim Carrey; it sounds unlikely but has to be seen to be believed. My daughter is currently studying Much Ado for her GCSE English. This production would convince even her that Shakespeare can be hugely entertaining. I cannot wait to see what Marianne Elliott brings to the stage next. - 194.176.105.38)
04 Jan 07
The RSC at its very best. Well done, not only to the wonderfull cast but also to the director, designer and stage crew who created such a stylish and fun evenings entertainment for us. - 172.207.67.18)
03 Jan 07
What a fantastic production; we think it may be the best Shakespeare we've ever seen. Certainly it is the best comedy. I don't think I'll ever forget Greig and Millsom trying to make themselves invisible during the 'declaration of love' scenes. Inspired staging, very sexy, energetic, full of joy. We came away invigorated and thrilled. Never been keen on Dogberry and Watch, and this was no exception, though it was probably as well done as it could have been. But the rest more than made up for it. - 86.139.17.101)
03 Jan 07
Marianne Elliott's idea to set this in 1953 Cuba is inspired and her staging turns one of Shakespeare's weaker plays into a very good night out indeed. In their last week in London, and after a long run in Stratford, the cast perform as if it is the opening night - not a single sign of being jaded or weary. The music is great and Les Brotherson's set captures crumbling Havana perfectly. It's great to see Shakespeare of this quality in the West End and wonderful to see it sold out on the second day of a New Year when we're all supposed to be hung over and broke ! - 86.138.26.181)
03 Jan 07
The critics get this one right, as far as the central peformances are concerned - they make the evening. But what was going on with the comedy low-life? After the first half ends on a high, Dogberry and the watch start the second half by killing the atmosphere, slowing the pace and muffing the gags. Not enough to spoil the show overall, as the rest of the cast are well up to scratch and Tamsin Greig is as good as everyone says. - 87.113.73.198)
30 Dec 06
Bette Bourne was fine. - 70.129.13.121)
23 Dec 06
Sheer joy. The chemistry between Beatrice and Benedick was electric... this production should be seen by anyone who is interested in having their sould firmly nourished. Go go go. - 172.142.194.148)
Opened 22 May 1905, originally the Waldorf, became the Strand in 1909 and the Whitney in 1911, back to the Strand in 1915. On 8 Oct 1940 the theatre was hit during a bombing raid - the show went on! There had been an earlier Strand Theatre where the Aldwych tube station now is that opened in 1832. 1061 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. On 25 March 2003 Delfont Mackintosh Theatres Limited, which had owned the freehold of the theatre since 1991, took over the management of the Strand from the Louis I Michaels Ltd Group of Companies when their lease expired. Delfont Mackintosh is now planning a 1.5 million refurbishment programme to restore the theatre to its former glory. May 2005 opened as Novello Theatre.
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