Synopsis On a midsummer's night Hermia and her lover Lysander flee from Athens and Demetrius - the man Hermia's father favours as a son-in-law. Demetrius follows, pursued by Helena who loves him in spite of being spurned in favour of Hermia. On the same night Bottom and his friends leave Athens to find somewhere quiet to rehearse their play which is to be performed at the wedding feast of Duke Theseus. Drawn into the woods they enter a world of magic, mystery and wonder. Sean Holmes and Filter theatre company present a new version of A Midsummer Night s Dream condensed into one magical hour. Well-known for their unique take on classic texts, with previous works including Three Sisters, Twelfth Night and Caucasian Chalk Circle, these former collaborators will be joined by the visionary band The London Snorkelling Team to create Shakespeare as you ve never seen it before.
It seems to be the current fashion to run plays without an interval. There are often good artistic reasons for doing so - the dramatic tension can run unabated. But Filter's production of Midsummer Night's Dream has no such lofty ideals; the sole aim is laughs, right from the start.
The play is introduced by Ed Gaughan's Peter Quince in a long rambling monologue, setting the scene for the action - the central gag being that they pull Mark Benton from the audience to play Bottom.
Director Sean Holmes looks to bring a new interpretation to bear on the play, but this toying with the text only brings to mind the type of mayhem that Morecambe & Wise wreaked on seemingly serious plays. There are further Morecambian touches: Benton even shuffles on stage with his shopping, and there's a willingness to burst into song at any opportunity (Chris Branch and Tom Haines’ score covers a variety of musical styles ); there are also a couple of excellent sight gags.
It's a madcap 105 minutes but while there are some funny moments, it's nowhere near as comical as the cast seem to think it is. The Morecambe & Wise reworkings were funny because everyone else involved played it perfectly straight. Here, much of the play seems almost incidental to the funny business. Usually, the mechanicals' Pyramus & Thisbe works because it so ruthlessly sets the actors’ pretensions against the ludicrous nature of the text, but when everything is an anarchic mess the joke has disappeared.
But that’s the same for the entire production. Many recent stagings have played heavily on the darker significance of the sexual misadventures in the Athenian woods and the strange dreamlike world engendered by the fairies, but there’s no sense of light and darkness here. There’s a strange ending too: after the woodland scenes are over, the six mortal lovers disappear and the truncated Pyramus & Thisbe is played to the audience rather than the court, which rather misses the point.
There’s nothing wrong with adapting Shakespeare of course and re-inventing the text for comedic purposes – Propeller did this brilliantly in their Comedy of Errors last year – but if you’re going to adapt a naturally comic play like this, the impetus is on the actors to make it even funnier. Sadly, for all their best efforts, it never really works – I’m sure much fun was had doing this but Filter have, on this occasion, done little to enhance the play.
I am led to believe that the original Shakespeare performances involved the audience and were consantly changing depending on the venue. Well I believe this performance did the same and I found it to be very original and entertaining, please ignore the bias review from Mr Cooter, I would recommend he pays heed to the fate of Phil Daoust :) - Brent
12 Mar 12
A riot from start to finish. Mashes up every part of the context we have come to expect but yet, remains a Shakespeare play all the way through. Very funny, hugely engaging. Naughty, bold, irreverent and modern. Helena especially gives a knockout performance. - irene
12 Mar 12
This review does not do any justice to what I have just seen. The play itself does not suffer one jot. Beyond brilliant. - Richard
08 Mar 12
Saw this tonight - absolutely loved it. Can't agree with this review. So different, so funny. Great entertainment & would highly recommend it. - Heather
07 Mar 12
Ignore the review, just ignore it, a minority view given undue prominence. - Paul
03 Mar 12
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done little to enhance the play?? ugh... I don't think anyone could enhance Shakespeare. That's hardly the point. When I saw it this weekend, there were scores of teenagers absolutely rapt who wouldn't usually endure Shakespeare, even the Dream done conventionally. Filter lower a drawbridge to the Bard. They should be celebrated. - Jimbo
28 Feb 12
Holmes has done for MND what BMW did for the mini! He has taken a timeless classic and made it funky and modern and appealing to the masses! It was innovative refreshing and kept the absurdity that the bard himself would have been amused by! - Clare Dennis
21 Feb 12
One of the best Shakespeare adaptations ive seen in a long while. TRANSFER! - Paris
20 Feb 12
This production doesn't trust the text, substituting relentless pantomime and sight gags. Tiresome. But music/effects not too bad; would go to see Benton's Bottom, hoho ,in a proper production. - Will Watts
17 Feb 12
Mr Cooter, you need to realise that Shakespeare is fun and that he was an entertainer. This company does it brilliantly. A feel good play that had everyone coming out with a smile on their face's. You can now get happy pills on prescription. - Martin Ross
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