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.
NOTE: The following review dates from April 2005 and this production's original run in Stratford-upon-Avon.
Three years ago the RSC hit, as it were, rock Bottom with a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream which was as big a critical flop as the previous one, three years before, had been a hit.
There was never any likelihood that associate director Gregory Doran, who directs this, the opening play in the company’s new Comedies season, would make an ass of himself with this perennial favourite. Nevertheless, although the RSC may now be financially in the black, it’s not yet there critically. Success in the Swan has not translated into a consistent body of work in the RST. Indeed the RSC’s recent successes have chiefly been with the work of writers other than Shakespeare.
Doran goes some way to restoring solvency with this enjoyable, visually spectacular production, the high point of which is undoubtedly the staging, by Bottom and his fellow mechanicals, of the ‘most lamentable tragedy’ of Pyramus and Thisbe for the chilly Athenian court. Malcolm Storry as Pyramus, looking and sounding for all the world like Noddy Holder, made me metaphorically beat the canvas in submission, although I was incapable of anything but struggling for breath.
Elsewhere Doran’s production brings undertones of darkness but not the wholesale monochrome of Richard Jones’ interpretation three years ago. This Dream, designed by Stephen Brimson Lewis, is frequently gorgeous, although the evocation of the forest through an accumulation of furniture, musical instruments and other detritus, will not be to everyone’s taste.
The setting is non-specifically modern although a somewhat confusing opening scene featuring ancient armour has you momentarily wondering if you’ve stumbled into a production of Troilus and Cressida by error. And indeed there’s a certain lack of focus overall about the production, despite its many fine qualities. The use of puppets to conjure up fairies and the changeling child are less dramatic than might be expected. The performances however are very good; some, excellent.
Chief among them is Joe Dixon, who confirms his earlier promise in the RSC’s recent Jacobethan season with a beautifully-spoken Oberon. There’s fine work too from Paul Chahidi as Peter Quince, Jonathan Slinger as a disgruntled, punkish Puck and Sinead Keenan as Hermia.
While there isn’t the sense of revelation that informed Doran’s Taming of the Shrew, this Dream offers beguiling diversion in, to paraphrase Don McLean, a starry, Storry night.
Amanda Harris as Titania is incoherent. Like others, I found the Mechanicals' cod-Brummie accents irritating. But - everything else about the production thrilled me. Go see it - if only to see the very funny inter-play between Puck and Oberon. - 217.207.157.89)
Opened 22 May 1905, originally the Waldorf, became the Strand in 1909 and the Whitney in 1911, back to the Strand in 1915. On 8 Oct 1940 the theatre was hit during a bombing raid - the show went on! There had been an earlier Strand Theatre where the Aldwych tube station now is that opened in 1832. 1061 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. On 25 March 2003 Delfont Mackintosh Theatres Limited, which had owned the freehold of the theatre since 1991, took over the management of the Strand from the Louis I Michaels Ltd Group of Companies when their lease expired. Delfont Mackintosh is now planning a 1.5 million refurbishment programme to restore the theatre to its former glory. May 2005 opened as Novello Theatre.
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