Synopsis A happy family is thrown into disarray by the arrival of an idealist, in Ibsen's 1884 drama. Should the truth be pursued, whatever the cost? The idealistic son of a wealthy businessman seeks to expose his father's duplicity and to free his childhood friend from the lies on which his happy home life is based.
How fascinating to catch this new Donmar Warehouse production of The Wild Duck (1884) so soon after another thrilling Ibsen revival, of his Pillars of the Community (1877), at the National. Ibsen himself considered The Wild Duck his masterpiece, a play that marked a major departure for him as a dramatist. And yet, there are distinct parallels between it and his earlier work.
Hakon Werle (played here by a gruff William Gaunt), the moneyed merchant in The Wild Duck, could well be Pillars’ greedy Karsten Bernick (a fiery Damian Lewis at the NT) a few decades on: tired, lonely and largely defeated as he nears the end of his life. Also as in Pillars, the arrival of a prodigal relative (in this case, his son Gregers) heralds major disruptions. But, beyond an Act 1 confrontation between father and son, Werle senior has little to fear. Gregers chooses instead to visit his lofty ideals upon the perceived victims of his father’s crimes. Ironically, though, unlike in Pillars, here the truth – or at least the dogged pursuit of it – has the power to destroy rather than to liberate.
In their “drab and depressing” attic apartment (revealed from behind a sliding wall in Vicki Mortimer’s design), the Ekdals are doing their best to cope with the trials of day-to-day existence. But when Gregers moves in to the spare room, he sets about dismantling their “life lies”, little realising the horrific potential consequences. He can’t understand that such delusions – of inventions, hunting, family, independence – can be not only a means of survival but often a sole source of happiness.
Ben Daniels – staying on after the Donmar’s last production, Sam Shepard’s frenetic black comedy The God of Hell - shifts gear as the contained but relentlessly principled Gregers who makes swift work of manipulating and derailing his childhood friend, Paul Hilton’s wonderfully weak and self-pitying Hjalmar Ekdal. Around these two flawed men are a circle of well-observed individuals who share in their torment: Michelle Fairley’s capable wife, Sinead Matthews’ exuberantly self-sacrificing daughter, Peter Eyre’s ex-military father, Nicholas Le Prevost’s hard-drinking but wise doctor neighbour.
Aside from these fine performances, Grandage’s production – of a fine new version by Festen author David Eldridge – boasts many lovely touches that illuminate the play. One of the most startling is the use of Adam Cork’s transitional music. Sounding as if it could be the cinematic score for a new space odyssey, it seems at first anachronistic, and yet proves apt: it opens up great vistas in the heart and mind before each scene when Grandage refocuses us with pinpoint accuracy on the details of this family drama, so beautifully played out on the intimate Donmar stage.
Faultless performance. Almost all the individual characters are perfectly rendered, and the set and lighting truly evoke the sense of cold in a wintry Norway against which the chill of the false relationships is set.
I don't believe this is Ibsen's finest play, and much prefer A Doll's House, but I can't imagine a finer reading or staging of The Wild Duck.
It deserves a longer run, of course, but possibly transferring it to a larger theatre will lose the immediacy and the impact. - 195.93.21.99)
01 Feb 06
At the moment the Best Play / production to be seen in London - 213.86.133.215)
13 Jan 06
I am in almost total agreement with ajh below - this is a shattering and powerful experience with almost universally superb performances. I had grave reservations about Ben Daniels in The God of Hell but in this he is outstanding, manging to be both intense and understated at the same time. Michelle Fairley is heartbreaking, bringing huge dignity to what could be a bland role as the devoted wife. I was less sure about Paul Hilton who played Hjalmar Ekdal rather like a petulant teenager who has been grounded rather than as a husband and father whose entire life has been shown to be based on deception. Although this is regarded as Ibsen's masterpiece I have to say I preferred Pillars of the Community which I felt to have more breadth as a drama. Finally, a plea to the critics - not all of us are experts who have seen countless productions of "the great works". My enjoyment of this was slightly spoiled because most reviews mentioned the tragedy which is the climax of the play - this is unfortunate for those of us newly discovering Ibsen. - 62.6.139.13)
10 Jan 06
Wonderful: a shattering experience and further proof of Ibsen's timelessness. The acting all round, but particularly Ben Daniels, Sinead Matthews, Paul Hilton and Michelle Fairley, is terrific in Michael Grandage's assured production on Vicki Mortimer's evocative set. Slightly slow first half gives way to a riveting second. Would be great to see this transfer. Much more enjoyable and engrossing than "Pillars Of The Community". - 195.82.123.181)
05 Jan 06
Such a terrific production makes the play seem like it was written yesterday. Thrilling and captivating. Can the Donmar do no wrong?
- 86.130.203.143)
04 Jan 06
I caught this magnificent production last night. Nicholas le Prevost was indisposed but Sean Jackson, who took on the role of Relling with script in hand (though he rarely glanced at it) was excellent.
Amid a flawless cast I must single out the wonderful Michelle Fairley, who imbues Ekdal's wife Gina with dignity and amazing depth. Hers is a low-key performance, but I couldn't take my eyes off her whenever she was onstage. It's the first time I've seen Miss Fairley since her harrowed performance in The Weir several years back, but she can still hit the emotional spot. She has the same profound interiority that Clare Higgins demonstrated in Vincent in Brixton and Death of a Salesman. - 82.34.197.175)
Re-opened in 1992. Seats 254. 1999 - Ambassador Theatre Group takes over from the Associated Capital Theatres as the landlord of the Donmar Warehouse. 2002 - Michael Grandage succeeds Sam Mendes as Artistic Director of the Donmar. Nick Frankfort succeeds Caro Newling as Executive Producer.
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