Synopsis Dance of Death is a piercing examination of a stifling and embittered marriage, founded on cruelty and a lust for power. The arrival of a divorced cousin further adds to the tension. The setting is a remote British Army garrison island off the coast of Co Donegal, between 1913 and 1916. The political turbulence and upheaval during this period of Irish history form a fitting backdrop for this extraordinary play and give it contemporary relevance. Website
Unlike plays of marital meltdowns, Dance of Death proves that a fate far worse than separating may actually be staying together. In this bleakly brilliant August Strindberg classic - subtly rendered in a new version by versatile American playwright Richard Greenberg (Three Days of Rain, Take Me Out) - we bear appalled but fascinated witness to a couple bound not by love but by hate.
Three months away from their silver wedding anniversary, even in their all-consuming contempt, Edgar and Alice - the "two unhappiest people on earth" - realise that they're welded together and can't break free: "I now know that only death can prise us apart." So then, when Edgar is taken ill, the wife greets the news with positive comic relish. "He could die of this," says their visitor Kurt. "Oh, thank God!" she replies.
Marooned on a Scandinavian island known as 'Little Hell', where they've managed to alienate all and even the doctor refuses to visit, the couple stare into the abyss of their lives with a Beckettian glitter as well as gloom. There's the strangled laughter of fearing death even as it's hoped for, and the endless hours, alternately of despair and fury, to be filled in the meantime. One minute they're tenderly remembering the good times in Copenhagen and he's acknowledging: "I suppose you could be attractive.... to other people.... when it suits you"; the next, she's comparing him to manure that's "not even top grade".
These two are far from easy company, to each other, to their guest, or to us. But fortunately, the top-grade actors who take us on this long day's journey into night and the following day make it an utterly compelling one.
Ian McKellen's haughty superiority, languid self-pity and lazy torpor as the husband makes you want to strangle him. As his wife, the brilliant, brittle Frances de la Tour is a study in melancholic, withering disdain. Both McKellen and de la Tour have played these roles before, he in a 2001 Broadway revival opposite Helen Mirren; she some 20 years ago at Riverside Studios opposite Alan Bates. But you feel that, this time, they have truly met their match.
Their toxically claustrophobic dynamic is interrupted by the arrival of Owen Teale's Kurt and leads to what passes for a plot in a play that's essentially a reflection of despair. Helplessly, Kurt is trapped in the middle of the game-playing and point-scoring, like Martha and George's guests in Edward Albee's Whose Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which was clearly inspired by Strindberg's forerunner.
A dark evening in every sense, Sean Mathias stages proceedings with atmospheric precision and intensity in the enveloping gloom of Jon Driscoll's deliberately dim lighting on Robert Jones' looming set. Frequently played by flickering candlelight, the play and its players both cast long and penetrating shadows. Though at times mordantly and morbidly funny, it's hardly an easy evening out, but it's definitely a rewarding one.
Excellent performance by Sir Ian Mckellen who acted out the character of Edgar wonderfully. Francis de la Tour and Owen Teale also to be highly commended. The set was fabulous and even though the play could have been a heavy going affair, the comic touches lightened the whole experience. I urge you to go and see this before it closes.. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.44.48.43)
24 May 03
This experience is what Peter Brook calls "deadly" theatre. This production has no integrity whatsoever. The actors go through their paces, Ian McKellen shows off all his technique, but so what. The piece is empty, vapid.
To some extent the fault lies with the director whose slant on the play is impossible to sustain throughout. Owen Teale was the only actor who convinced, as he did early on, but when later we get to the substance of the play and he becomes embroiled, nothing that had happened previously gave him any justification for his revulsion and angst and the poor bloke's histrionics just seemed ham.
Why is so much West End theatre like this? Going through the paces, self-dislaying, wowing us with technique but, in the end, having no effect on us whatsoever. Where was the "pity and fear"? Where the catharsis? Strindberg is nothing if not naturalistic. This play is an ugly, cruel, almost bestial account of what happens when a relationship goes hopelessly wrong. In the hands of this company it becomes an exercise in glibness.
Michael Green - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.92.168.167)
20 May 03
I can't say I like the play much, but it's well worth the visit to see one of Ian McKellern's very best performances (alongside his mesmerising Richard III)and a wonderfull set. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.211.102.35)
03 May 03
Truly Brilliant, one of the best shows I have ever seen. Sean Mathias has got the gloomy tones of the play just right, and as for the acting. I have always said that Owen Teale is a Brilliant actor and he proved it again here. De la Tour is simply amazing as the ice queen wife, and my favourite actor of all time Ian Mckellen, is utterly masterful as the major. I implore you BOOK NOW! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.225.196.13)
02 Apr 03
Disappointing despite v good acting. The first disappointment was the news that Helen Mirren was to be replaced by Frances De La Tour. Having had the misfortune of witnessing her Cleopatra at Stratford a few years back which was toe-curlingly embarrassing, I can't say I was looking forward to seeing her in this. A fine comic actress yes, but not 'serious' actress, on the performances I have seen at least.I agree with those who feel this production has gone too much for laughs. It's as Pinter said of his own writing; 'it's funny up to a point'The problem with this approach is that when Owen Teale remarks about how the house is poisonous, hellish, you can't agree because we haven't seen or felt the venom or frustration. Ian McKellen 'acts' wonderfully, but I didn't feel moved. Frances De La Tour matches him v well but the direction is at fault here. I gather from one review that the production has gained an extra 15 or 20 minutes since it played on Broadway and can believe it. The set, by the way,is magnificent. Full marks to the theatre for bringing this to the West End. It is v watchable, just not as good as one would have hoped - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.31.224.1)
23 Mar 03
Best play on in London. At last someone brings out the comedy in Strindberg - it's too easy to descend into gloomy Swedish introspection but McKellen's and DeLaTour's verbal sparring is a delight. This is truly high-class acting. A must-see. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.120.117.40)
18 Mar 03
I wasn't sure what to expect with this given that Scandanavian drama tends to be a bit heavy. It certainly wasn't a bundle of laughs, but McKellan and La Tour were enthralling. I wondered how she had stuck Edgar for 25 years without killing him. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (192.39.93.40)
11 Mar 03
This play alone is worth seeing for the central pairing - Ian McKellen and Frances De La Tour are electric together. The best moments in the play exist merely because they work so well together. I have never seen McKellen in better form. His portrayal of the tormented Edgar is hypnotic. At the other end of the scale Owen Teale as Kurt is outclassed and resorts to either underacting or absurd histrionics in order to try to communicate his part. The play, however, is terrifically dull. Not even the stunningly decayed set which the figures haunt can make what happen interesting. This play is infinitely watchable but the lack of developement in the second half forces me to give it a meager three out of five. The performances alone really deserve better. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (134.219.102.209)
24 Feb 03
Boring, long and a very dull lit play. Ian McKellen is very strong along with Francis de la Tour and the other guy but other than that there is nothing to this play. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.92.168.175)
Opened 17 Dec 1888. 959 seats. [Bought from Andrew Lloyd Webber and now owned by Broadway producer Max Weitzenhoffer and Nica Burns. Society of London Theatre member.
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