Synopsis The story of Belle and the prince turned to a beast till he can make someone love him. From the acclaimed creators of Phillip Pullman's The Firework-Maker's Daughter, the Lyric once again joins forces with Told By An Idiot's Paul Hunter to bring a new version of one of the world's great fairy tales for a Christmas show of beastly brillance.
The seasonal show at the Lyric Hammersmith, is usually slightly different, not to say off-kilter, and this year’s offering, Beauty and the Beast, a collaboration between the Lyric and the Warwick Arts Centre, is no exception. It is rather harder, though, to say exactly what it is.
The piece is created by the Told by an Idiot company, which take its name from that line in Macbeth about life being a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Here, there’s sound, and a bit of fury, and just a pinch of significance in the story of young Belle following a course of tough love to tame the Beast and appease her dead mother’s memory.
Paul Hunter’s production of his own script (co-written with Carl Grose) mixes elements of crude pantomime with Gallic surrealism, daringly invoking Jean Cocteau’s great 1946 movie and then diverting into total silliness. But the result is jarring and unsatisfactory, as though the attempt at something truly beautiful is inevitably swamped in low-level “physical theatre.” The standard of execution is frankly humdrum.
Belle, played by the diminutive Lisa Hammond, is a curiously bossy and unengaging creature. She and her two ugly sisters, Bridget and Brioche (Hayley Carmichael and Nick Haverson), as well as their brother Boris (Dharmesh Patel), are promised whatever they request by their businessman father (Yolanda Vasquez, unconvincingly masculine even with a moustache), whose loss of a shipment of gherkins at sea, and all his wealth, is only a temporary setback.
Belle wants a rose for her mother’s grave. Dad gets entangled in the forest lair and has to promise the Beast (Leo Wringer in a mammoth curly wig and a blood-stained shirt) to send along his dearest daughter. Off she goes, attended by her big silly dog (Javier Marzan in red tights and oven-glove ears) to the Beast’s world of a Henri Rousseau jungle and a strange, de Chirico-style ghost palace with a climbing frame and a magic dinner table.
Michael Vale’s design conjures these elements without making anything coherent of them. Belle whizzes around in a wheelchair and is never frightened of the Beast. Her siblings sing a jolly song of “good riddance” at the start of the second act that’s reprised at the happy finale. Belle has been given a little black dress and she gives the Beast a great big kiss. But the magic, and the mystery, of their alliance remain resolutely unplumbed.
While I normally dread the idea of family panto at Christmas, I enjoyed the topsy-turvy wackiness of this production. Lisa Hammond is a brilliantly modern Belle (or Beauty for short). Xavier Marzan is her fantastic four-legged confidant - and her sisters are ugly but truly gruesome in a wickedly funny way. While the Beast's appearance did have children running for cover in the theatre, my kids have been running around with oven-gloves on their heads pretending to be Belle's faithful dog Kronenburg all weekend. Lots of fun. - Neil
11 Dec 07
My friends and I did not enjoy this at all. We left at half time. It is not your traditional panto - so don't go if that's what you're after. - Nina
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