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Synopsis The play is set during the climax of the French Revolution. After a series of bloody purges the life-loving, volatile Danton is tormented by his part in the killing. His political rival, the driven, ascetic Robespierre, decides Danton’s fate. A titanic struggle begins. Once friends who wanted to change the world, now one stands for compromise, the other for ideological purity as the guillotine awaits. Running time: Approx. 1hr 55mins (no interval) Sponsored by Travelex £10 Tickets
Toby Stephens takes the title role in Danton's Death
Date: 26 July 2010
George Büchner was 21 when he wrote Danton's Death - a revolutionary himself, he was hiding from the police at the time. Some have claimed the play to be the greatest political tragedy ever written, and this adaptation by Howard Brenton captures Büchner's exhilarating energy as Danton struggles to avoid his inexorable fall. The production opened in the Olivier at the National Theatre on 22 July 2010 (previews from 15 July) and continues in rep until 14 October.
Set during the climax of the French Revolution, Danton is tormented by his part in the killings of his fellow revolutionaries. His political rival, the driven, ascetic Robespierre, was once his friend. Now one stands for compromise, the other for ideological purity as the guillotine awaits.
The production marks the National Theatre debut for Donmar Warehouse artistic director, Michael Grandage, who brings a rather stark interpretation to the stage of the Olivier. Toby Stephens, most recently seen in The Real Thing at the Old Vic, takes the title role, whilst National Theatre regular Elliot Levey is given a role to sink his teeth into with the "incorruptible" Robespierre.
Did Grandage leave the critics onside or in revolt?
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (three stars) – "The National Theatre keeps returning to Georg Büchner’s thrilling 1835 drama of the French Revolution. ... Büchner, who wrote the play aged 21 in just five weeks, captures the squall and confusion of the First Terror ... Danton, played with great vim and swagger by Toby Stephens, is the victim of the tribunal he founded a few months earlier... But the public street scenes are damagingly cut... The National Assembly is woefully under-populated, too, with a dozen members rhubarbing away upstage... Paule Constable's lighting of Christopher Oram's bleak, high-windowed set, using about half the stage, is a masterpiece of invention... Nonetheless, Grandage’s reductive approach is a waste of the Olivier’s epic potential. The early invented scene of Robespierre being assisted in his levée by three women is not a success, and the ingenious sleight-of-hand lavished on the climactic executions at a matchbox-sized guillotine is frankly risible. Barnaby Kay gives another fine performance as Camille Desmoulins, and Eleanor Matsuura caches the eye as Danton’s prostitute."
Charles Spencer in the Telegraph (four stars) – "The German dramatist Georg Büchner was only 21 when he wrote Danton’s Death in five frenetic weeks ... The play is one of the most astonishing debuts in dramatic history and before his tragically early death from typhoid two years later he had written another masterpiece, Woyzeck... Unlike Woyzeck... Danton’s Death is rarely revived and ... You need to do a bit of homework if your knowledge of the French Revolution is as patchy as mine. It is both an acute analysis of the dangers of radicalism ... and a powerful meditation on death that often brings Shakespeare’s Hamlet to mind. Michael Grandage's production... confidently choreographs the big crowd scenes, with hardliners baying for blood, and a thrilling trial scene in which Danton argues passionately to save his life. Toby Stephens has always cut a dash in heroic roles ... He swaggers round the stage with panache, but also discovers quieter moments of tenderness and fear, that convey a touching, flawed humanity."
Fiona Mountford in the Evening Standard (three stars) – "The National has done its best to render this daunting political tragedy accessible ... but it remains a tough ask. Büchner’s original text is sprawling and dense ... Thank heavens, then, for this comparatively pithy, pared-down new version by Howard Brenton, presented as part of the National’s Travelex £10 season. It’s the spring of 1794... Danton (Stephens) and Robespierre (Elliot Levey) are on an inexorable collision course. Danton, a man with a well-developed love of life’s earthier pleasures, wants to stop the purges and show mercy. Stephens is a weary revolutionary, most convincing away from the dry rhetoric of politics. 'We had some times, body, you and I,' is his poignant reminiscence with himself on the eve of execution ... Levey’s nicely pitched performance readily explains Robespierre’s nickname of the 'Incorruptible'... although Levey cleverly suggests a man who is increasingly haunted."
Ian Shuttleworth in the Financial Times (three stars) – "This is the summer of Howard Brenton... Büchner and Brenton’s Danton is the personification of the limits of legitimacy of the French Revolution. Toby Stephens makes an excellent Danton... in Act Three of this uninterrupted 110-minute presentation, Stephens seems to grow physically stockier, as Danton manifests as the rollicking bruiser who symbolised the Revolution’s vigour in so many ways. Elliot Levey’s Robespierre is a slighter figure who sometimes raises his voice, but never shouts ... The fiery anti-Danton demagoguery is left to Alec Newman as Saint-Just, at once impassioned and yet heartless. Fine performances, but the play itself has not aged well... not even Brenton’s playwriting skill and ideological dedication, combined with Michael Grandage’s directorial control... can make these serial debates... vibrant."
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail (three stars) – "In this version of the play by Howard Brenton, Danton shrugs at fate. He claims to ‘flirt’ with death. ‘History has a way of biting you in the arse,’ is how Mr Brenton makes the hedonistic Danton put it ... Much as I like Mr Stephens’s swagger... I suspect Danton should be more earthy ... On the whole Mr Brenton’s script is demanding, compressed, even poetic ... Director Michael Grandage keeps things spare but could he not have souped things up a bit to accentuate the difference between Danton and his ascetic rival Robespierre? Elliot Levey underplays Robespierre but Alec Newman fares better as the vindictive, inaptly-named Saint-Just ... And the guillotine is a work of art all in itself."
Libby Purves in The Times (four stars) – "As this play demonstrates with great gusto, the violence which gave birth to Republican France was fed by a death-cult... This is a young man's play, Georg Büchner died of typhoid at 23. A youthful, raging piece it is: quite pointless to expect measure and subtlety, even as adapted by Howard Benson ... Michael Grandage's play is sparsely set, rapid moving and lit dramatically... it makes the most of all ranting opportunities ... Chief ranter is a swaggering, sensual Toby Stephens as Danton... Elliot Levey's neat, dessicated Robespierre speaks for a colder 'Virtue' ... Robespierre's cold, neurotic 'incorruptible' ideology is perfectly contrasted with Danton's sexy physicality, boyish bravado and gnawish regret for the many deaths he himself orchestrated... In a prison scene near the end of the play we at last see Danton's touching abandonment of bravado... The guillotine makes its first and last appearance as the set creaks open."
The National Theatre keeps returning to Georg Büchner’s thrilling 1835 drama of the French Revolution – Michael Grandage's NT debut production is the third after Jonathan Miller’s (in 1971) and Peter Gill’s (in 1982) – without ever quite nailing the hectic mix of rhetoric and Expressionism.
Büchner, who wrote the play aged 21 in just five weeks, captures the squall and confusion of the First Terror in the turmoil of street violence, courtroom denunciations and the arraignment of Danton and his friends who are pleading for an end to the executions now running at two dozen a day.
The vivacity of all this is suggested by the fact that Danton, played with great vim and swagger by Toby Stephens, is the victim of the tribunal he founded a few months earlier. Stephens cuts a more romantic figure than did Brian Cox in the last production, though Cox was sweatier, and he embodies the contradictory, impulsive side of Danton to perfection.
But the public street scenes are damagingly cut – the tumult of tarts and pimps, and a foul-mouthed stage prompter called Simon – and the play distilled, almost, in the triangular revolutionary statements of Danton, Elliot Levey’s icy but furtively troubled Robespierre and Alec Newman’s Saint-Just, a red-coated Beethoven lookalike.
The National Assembly is woefully under-populated, too, with a dozen members rhubarbing away upstage while the great debate is joined. There are a few torches now and then, and Paule Constable’s lighting of Christopher Oram’s bleak, high-windowed set, using about half the stage, is a masterpiece of invention: the tribunal scenes look like the paintings of Jacques-Louis David, and Danton’s walk in open country is done by flooding the forestage in sunny rays.
Nonetheless, Grandage’s reductive approach is a waste of the Olivier’s epic potential, although the second half of this compressed version, with its dreams and nightmares and strange, jagged poetry – all very well done in Howard Brenton’s new translation from a literal version by his wife Jane Fry and the Propeller actor Simon Scardifield – is much better.
The early invented scene of Robespierre being assisted in his levée by three women is not a success, and the ingenious sleight-of-hand lavished on the climactic executions at a matchbox-sized guillotine frankly risible. The play needs to breathe again in the last public scene, which is cut.
Barnaby Kay gives another fine performance as Camille Desmoulins, and Eleanor Matsuura caches the eye as Danton’s prostitute. And there’s some classy revolutionary rumbling on the soundtrack by Adam Cork, another example, though, of how aesthetic niceties have disguised the play’s real mess and fervour.
I love history plays and have been well served on the South Bank in the last couple of years. Howard Brenton has been responsible for some of the best of those plays but his adaptation of Buchner's Danton's Death is a severe disappointment. It never engages as a drama and mainly consists of a series of speeches, frequently shouted at the audience, particularly by Toby Stephens. The final coup de theatre is clever in a "how did they do that" way but frankly I got more of a flavour of the French Revolution from the short-lived musical of a Tale of Two Cities than from this. - David Baxter
01 Sep 10
I could have been less generous and given just one star, but I couldn't quite bring myself to be so unkind. Firstly, why Toby Stephens? He can't act for toffees and in this production he was totally lost, strutting about the Olivier stage an actor desperately in search of his character! Can someone tell him that spluttering and shouting ain't necessarily acting! The rest of cast were just so so too and this is our National Theatre! What's going on? I am mystified how Michael Grandage who has done such wonderful work could have let this happen? I could go on but I won't - another duff night at the NT and why I go for the ten quid seats now instead of the £49.50s in the row behind! The program says Alistair Coomer was the casting director in which case he should be sacked! Don't waste your hard earned cash on this turkey. - rds
20 Aug 10
I found this a totally absorbing piece of theatre. Mainly due to Howard Brenton’s new text. The casting was excellent, notably from Toby Stephens as Danton and Elliot Levey as Robespierre. The staging and set were imaginative, with a special mention for the guillotine! I enjoyed the evening very much.
- David
14 Aug 10
Well I liked the set! It managed to fill the stage and Grandage did create his usual slick style of production but it’s a dull piece of theatre. I haven’t read the original but it sounds a lot more interesting with views from the crowd scenes and man who is hung for wiping his nose with a hanky and not his finger (the true sign of spotting a gentlemen apparently).Also the crowd scenes may have given the impression of a revolution going on!
What was with Toby Stephens accent? He sounded like a character from a That Mitchell and Webb Look
Why did Danton’s wife and maid suddenly perform in a stylised way towards the end?
Also windows open for the good guys and shut for the baddies. Oh please
Also for a production that was very minimal did we need the guillotine at the end? Could we of just had some sound effects? – it was all a bit Andrew Lewd Rubber ‘super musical’ for me.
This one my first trip to the NT this year and judging by the schedule I have nothing else planned. Even at £10 it’s not worth it
- grrr to the nt
12 Aug 10
This is a wordy play, even after being seriously cut, made even more dull by a conspicious lack of emotion in virtually all the cast. Toby Stephens is a very 'stagey' actor and a lack of real conviction from him influences everyone else. Why this was staged in the Olivier when, especially with such a small cast, it could easily and more effectively have been done in the Lyttelton, or even the Cottesloe. No real use made of the wonderful Olivier stage and the frequent dimming and raising of lights to indicate a change of set served as a distraction. This should be a tense play about passion, disillusionment, intransigence and the power of oratory with a dramatic, shocking finale. Instead we were all quite glad by the end when, instead of being shaken and surprised, the entire audience was busily working out how the guillotine scene was done and then glad to go home - maybe that is why there is no interval - as virtually everyone already knows the ending - a lot of people would not have come back in after the break. - Rebekkah
03 Aug 10
Disappointing. Would need further persuading that this is a great play based on this production. As the outcome of the evening is given away by the title of the play I was expecting more drama and tension to compensate. Some good speeches but generally lots of shouting, people sitting on the floor (presumably because the budget didn't stretch to furniture), some big shutters being opened and then closed, three people pretending to be a crowd,longed for (because it's not in the play) final showdown between Danton and Rospierre never materialising, big blackout at end in which the 'is that it?' question hangs in the air so tangibly that the applause when it finally comes is somewhat of a relief. Modern phrasing of some of the translation jars at points. More thought needed to be given to how this plays if you're not sitting close to the stage. Extra star for the guillotine though. - PJ
26 Jul 10
Rubbish review Michael Coveney!
It was excellent. A stark and exciting portrayal of the end of the revolution, pared down in terms of cast, but it still managed to bubble with energy and intelligence. - Jo
25 Jul 10
Utter stinker, AVOID!
Must try harder. - coral
24 Jul 10
Somehow playwright Georg Bruchner and adapter Howard Brenton have managed to turn an interesting piece of French history into a very dull play. The tail end of the revolution is ripe territory for a political / psychological thriller, but thrilling this is not. It’s almost two uninterrupted hours of angst and rants with few redeeming features. It’s just badly written and there’s not a lot director Michael Grandage or his fine case can do to redeem it. I felt very much like I did after the same director’s Madame de Sade last year i.e. that there seemed to be a much more interesting play happening off-stage. I don’t even think I want to write about it any more – except to say that if you’re still awake when they get to the executions, they are very cleverly staged; I still haven’t worked out how they do it! - Gareth James
24 Jul 10
I agree with your reviewer. Toby Stephens gives a mercurial quality to Danton. His bravado in the face of death, the ruefull acknowledgment of the biter bit is gripping. Lighting fab,in the waste of the vast space,and the sounds dramatic but call in the mob please - claudia Boulton
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