Synopsis Or What You Will. Shakespeare comedy of mistaken identity, practical jokes and unrequited love. Rescued from a shipwreck the twins Viola and Sebastian arrive independently in Illyria, both thinking the other is drowned. Viola disguises herself as a boy and finds employment with the Duke who is in love with Olivia. Malvolio is the subject of a cruel joke played on him by Sir Toby Belch (yellow stockings cross-gartered) leading him to believe that Olivia loves him. But Olivia has fallen in love with the disguised Viola, while she is in love with the Duke (following it so far?!). Running time approximately 2 hours 55 minutes
After seeing some disappointing productions of this sparkling play, it’s good to see the RSC return to London bringing a Twelfth Night that hits the spot. Michael Boyd’s production adorns the newly refurbished and renamed Novello (formerly the Strand) and provides a promising opening to the season.
Too often in recent years, directors have seemed to have downplayed the comedy; but Boyd succeeds in combining some of the darker aspects of the play with the madcap playing. This is a production that revolves around the excellent Feste of Forbes Masson: particularly in his relationship with Maria. Masson dominates the production: right from start singing a discordant blues to accompany Orsino’s grieving, to the final heartfelt coda.
These two, with Toby Belch, create a triangle that mirrors that of the main protagonists. But Masson’s love-struck Feste gives us an Illyrian Pagliaccio, unable to bear Maria’s transfer of affection to the greater social standing afforded by a union with Sir Toby. Clive Wood’s Belch is much crueller than usual; his hatred of Malvolio more class-driven and his taunting of Aguecheek more malicious than we’re accustomed to. The earthy sexuality of Meg Fraser’s Maria and John Mackay’s loose-limbed Aguecheek provide the laughs.
There are some good performances all round: from Richard Cordery’s pompous Malvolio carefully enunciating every syllable to Barnaby Kay’s obsessive Orsino. I also liked Aislin McGuckin’s Olivia as she slowly unfroze from her hard-faced mourning and discovered her sexual yearning. Only Sally Tatum’s rather uncharismatic Viola disappointed – it was difficult to imagine either Orsino or Olivia falling for her.
The production does perhaps underplay the sexual ambiguity that pervades the text and the homoerotic aspect of the relationships between Orsino and Viola (as Caesario), and Antonio and Sebastian. But this is an enjoyable start to the season – a Christmas treat indeed.
- Maxwell Cooter
Note: The following THREE-STAR review dates from April 2005 and this production's earlier run at Stratford.
Uncertainty seems the leitmotif of Michael Boyd's new Royal Shakespeare Company production of Twelfth Night. Feste, as played by Forbes Masson, is consumed by doubt, unsure until he opens his mouth whether he can deliver the wit to woo. This neat reversal of the usual playing of the fool as a world-weary cynic points up the extent to which the characters in this late comedy live by the favour of others.
Sir Toby Belch owes the roof over his head and the bread on his plate to the goodwill of his niece, something her socially ambitious steward is eager to undermine. Sir Andrew Aguecheek, Olivia, Viola and Orsino all look to others to fulfil their happiness, while patronage in the court of the Duke of Orsino, as becomes clear to Viola, can be withdrawn just as quickly as given.
Illyria then, is a troubled place, something a number of recent productions of the play have been at pains to point up. The problem with going too far down this road, as the previous production by the RSC some four years ago made plain, is that it can bleed the humour from what is an extremely funny play.
And indeed some of the best lines seem to go for little. Part of the fault can be laid at the door of Nicky Henson as Sir Toby, who fair rattles through his lines. John Mackay, reprising a role he performed for Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory recently, is excellent as Aguecheek, resembling a discomfited crane.
Masson, a small anxious man in a loud suit, is terrific too as Feste, assured only when he launches into song (the music by John Woolf and Sinead Jones is very good - lapses into Great Gig in the Sky-style ululations aside). There are also first-rate performances by Richard Cordery as Malvolio, Barnaby Kay as Orsino, self-infatuated and something of a silly ass, and Meg Fraser as a hard-nosed, tender-hearted Maria. A lovely touch in an early scene has her resorting to flashing to stop an outbreak of extreme revelry.
Designer Tom Piper also deserves credit for some wonderful imaginative flourishes. Those who haven't seen the recent Donmar and Globe productions won't feel short-changed. Those who have had greatness 'thrust on them' will find enjoyment, albeit tempered with a sense of loss. Very Twelfth Night really.
When Twelfth Night was written, that occasion marked the end of a winter festival beginning on All Hallows Eve. During Twelfth Night festivities the normal order of things was reversed and nothing was quite what it seemed. The play is usually classed as a "straight" (rather than farcical) comedy, but its world is a topsy-turvy one, ideally suited to the type of entertainment for which it was intended but not often brought out in performance, since it is usually given a specific temporal and locational context (even, on one RSC occasion, Shakespeare's own Stratford).
But Michael Boyd's wonderful version (itself for the RSC and seen at Stratford) truly reflects the play's origins, revealing (and revelling in) all the illusions and delusions affecting its principal characters, and setting the whole in an unusually sophisticated (but still suitably topsy-turvy) context which works superbly.
No attempt is made to create a realistic Illyria. The action happens in designer Tom Piper's version of a "wooden O", a circular stage bounded by a semi-circular wall containing several doorways and decorated with a large pair of (female) eyes. On stage initially are the music stands and instruments of Orsino's orchestra, but after the opening scene these are raised up on ropes to hang from the flies for the rest of the performance. And the score itself is jazz-like, and the costumes modern; a setting light years away from the play's original production, but one which illustrates Shakespeare's magnificent timelessness.
Here we encounter an Orsino (Barnaby Kay) who seems to worship Olivia from afar but whose sexual proclivities are uncertain, given his reaction to Kananu Kirimi's far from shrinking Viola, whose own enthusiasm for her male disguise is more commonly encountered in Rosalind. Olivia (Aislin McGuckin) wears severe black, which initially seems to reflect her actual character as well as her state of mourning, but her true nature is revealed by her enthusiastic reaction to "Cesario", and her acceptance of Sebastian in "his" stead. Even Richard Cordery's wonderful Malvolio has hidden depths, being a martial arts enthusiast and a biker in his spare time!
And it is Malvolio, and the other inhabitants of the subplot, who most engage our emotions here, for a happy ending for the main plot characters is never in doubt. But Malvolio's punishment, played out not in a dark dungeon but in the full glare of the stage lights, is a cruel one, whilst John Mackay's Sir Andrew Aguecheek, who is apparently a frustrated ballet-dancer, is devastated as well as disillusioned when his "friend" Sir Toby's rejects him. And most moving of all is the fate of Forbes Masson's superb Feste, who is at one point kissed passionately by Meg Fraser's Maria but whom she ultimately abandons for Sir Toby.
It is entirely appropriate, therefore, that it is Feste who sings (quite beautifully, for Forbes Masson has a fine voice) the play's sad, haunting, final song as "rain" - reams of sheet music from the stands above - flutters down from the flies.
- 194.75.129.200)
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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