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Women Beware Women

Swan Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon
From: Thursday, 16th February 2006
To: Saturday, 1 April 2006

Our Review: starstarstarstar Your Reviews: starstarstarstar

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Synopsis

A story of the corruption of innocence. Thee young people are seduced by the lies, lust and treachery of the sophisticated players who thrive in the glamorous court of the Duke of Florence. Written in 1623

Our Review: starstarstarstar

27 February 2006

In The Changeling and Women Beware Women, Thomas Middleton nailed down sexual vagaries in a way Shakespeare never approached in any of his works. A Midsummer Night’s Dream or Romeo and Juliet this most definitely is not.

The play opens with a pair of lovers, newly eloped to the groom’s mother’s house. However, their love will be brutally cut short. The bride, Bianca, catches the eye of the Duke of Florence and, lured to his palace on pretext, is raped by the duke. So far, so conventional. But the rape is just the starting point for Middleton’s exploration of the dark side of sex, ambition and power.

Rather than kill herself, or seek revenge, Bianca adjusts to the realpolitik and transfers her loyalty to the Duke. Leantio, her heartbroken lover, also quickly adjusts to the new realities and after accepting service in the Duke’s court, soon consents to be a noblewoman’s toy boy.

While necrophilia and cannibalism, which pop up in some of Mid...

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Latest User Review

194.75.129.200) - 20 March 2006: starstarstarstar

I have to confess, rather ashamedly, that I had never seen, or even read, any of Middleton's plays before (though I would add that, judging by the delighted astonishment of those around me, I was far from alone in my ignorance) and hence had very little idea of what to expect from Laurence Boswell's production of Women Beware Women. Though the play is classed as a Jacobean tragedy (and indeed in the final scene there is a plethora of sudden deaths, some perpetrated by rather unlikely means) it had, in this production, more of the feel of a tragic-comedy, and contains much humour relating to the status of women which still speaks loudly to us today – as indeed do the serious ideas which underlie that humour. Another fact which prevents the play from having the status of a true tragedy is that none of the characters can be classed as a tragic hero (or heroine). Whilst at times we feel for many of the people caught in the toils of its plots and counterplots, the only one who retains our sympathy (as perhaps the author intended, since he is murdered before the ever-growing number of corpses that strew the stage in the last scene tests the bounds of our credulity) is not the stuff of which heroes are made. Having said as much, though, I would add at once that this did not prevent the production from being a hugely entertaining one. Designed by Richard Hudson, with a "set" that essentially consists of an ingeniously revolving wall with a doorway to one side (which is turned round to indicate changes of location, the characters often entering and exiting round it as it moves) and rich Jacobean costumes, it also has a score, by Tim Sutton, which in tone suitably matches the rather operatic nature of the story. And the excesses of the final scene are not merely reflected but actually gloried in by its superb staging. It also has a fine cast who were clearly enjoying themselves every bit as much as we were and are led by the superb Penelope Wilton as the scheming Livia, whose direct way of communicating with us helps to bring out the modernity of some of the play's ideas. I would also single out Bruce Mackinnon's wonderfully over the top portrayal of a foolish Ward, and Elliot Cowan's very sympathetic Leantio, who is a lowly clerk drawn into the bewildering intrigues of court life by his marriage to a fine gentlewoman and who ultimately pays with his life, but the whole ensemble contributed to the overall level of entertainment. I would strongly recommend this production to anyone – particularly those to whom the plays of Middleton are unfamiliar, who may, like me, have their eyes opened to the richness of his works and come away from the performance with a wish to see more of them. ...

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Cast

Penelope Wilton (Livia)
Tim Pigott-Smith (Duke of Florence)
Hayley Atwell (Bianca)
Peter Guinness (Guardiano)
Bruce Mackinnon (The Ward)
Paul Rider (Sordido)
Emma Cunniffe (Isabella)
Jonathan Bex (Lord)
Elliot Cowan (Leantio)
Julian Curry (Fabritio)
Trevor Allan Davies
Rob Edwards (Hippolito)
Morgan James
Leon Ockenden (Messenger)
Michael Thomas (Lord Cardinal)
Mary Chater (Hymen)
Susan Engel (Widow)
Gesella Ohaka (Hebe)
Claudia Renton (Ganymede)

Creative

Thomas Middleton (Author)
Royal Shakespeare Company (Producer)
Laurence Boswell (Director)
Richard Hudson (Design)
Tim Mitchell (Lighting)
Tim Sutton (Music)
Andrea J Cox (Sound)


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