Uncle Vanya
From: Wednesday, 21st March 2012
To: Saturday, 28 April 2012
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Synopsis
Set on a crumbling country estate, Uncle Vanya is the tale of two obsessive love affairs that lead nowhere, and a flirtation that brings disaster. The irascible Vanya and his niece Sonya have managed the estate on behalf of their relative, a renowned Professor for the last twenty-five years. Now retired, the Professor and his beautiful young wife come to visit, throwing the household into disarray, igniting hidden passions and old grudges. Family ties are tested further when the ageing and gout-ridden Professor announces his plans to sell the estate and live off the proceeds in the city. By turns comic, tragic, romantic, and wistful, Chekhov's play is an unforgettable study of unfulfilled dreams and unrequited love. One of his four great masterpieces written on the eve of the twentieth century, it features a feast of subtle comic portraits of a family at logger heads with each other and the world around them, that still has resonance at the start of another new century.
Our Review: 



Michael Coveney - 30 March 2012
The Print Room has rapidly established itself as an essential fringe venue in an atmospheric converted warehouse in Westbourne Grove, and its first classic, Uncle Vanya, thrives on a “one-room” intimacy; Lucy Bailey’s production is the best close-up Chekhov since Katie Mitchell’s version of the same play at the Young Vic.
What’s often lost among all the lassitude and grumpiness is the rawness of Chekhov’s characters: the uneasiness of the patronising professor in the countryside; the awkwardness of Yelena, his young wife, with her enslaved new step-daughter, Sonya; the thwarted sexuality and overwhelming exhaustion of Vanya himself.
Staged “in the square” -- as in a more spacious Orange Tree, perhaps -- there’s no escaping the scrawny fleshiness of Iain Glen’s magnificently intemperate Vanya, just as there’s no escape for him. And William Houston’s physically overpoweri...
Latest User Review
steveatplays - 14 April 2012: ![]()
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This is a claustrophic, intense and excellent production of Uncle Vanya, staged in the round vivaciously so that noone should feel cheated by sightlines. Despite my reservations that Iain Glen is simply too much of an alpha male to be Vanya, too charismatic to be cowing to David Yelland certainly, his expression of dashed expectations and the loss of all hope was harrowing. He is helped by the fact that William Houston's Astrov is a silverback gorilla of a man, pounding (and heavy breathing) his uber-alpha male frame around the set, with a deep raspy voice that evoked the sturdiness of Barry White. Such a man, you can accept, could get the better of Glen in a love rivalry. And these excellent actors are surrounded by a flawless ensemble, the all-round competence of which is only rivalled by that of the Old Red Lion's Mercury Fur. Indeed, Charlotte Emmerson's Sonya is exquisitely touching in her expression of unrequited love, forthrightness and a compassionate heart. The most remarkable moment in this play, for me, was when David Yelland delivered his life-changing speech, in the second half, to the entire assembled ensemble. He does it in such a sanctimonious, self-regarding, pernickety way to the bewildered gathering that it had me in hysterics, and then Glen's Vanya erupts and his sadness overwhelms everything with brutal heartbreaking vigour. Wonderful!...
Cast
Iain Glen
Charlotte Emmerson
David Yelland
William Houston
Lucinda Millward
David Shaw-Parker
Marlene Sidaway
Caroline Blakiston
Andrew Hanratty
Creative
Chekhov (Author)
The Print Room (Producer)
Mike Poulton (Adaptation)
Lucy Bailey (Director)
William Dudley (Design)
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