One can admire Alceste’s tunnel-vision attitude to social hypocrisy but that doesn’t mean that one warms to him.
Roger McGough has completed his
hat-trick of Molière adaptations with a version of
Le Misanthrope, which
cocks its own snook at verse patterns, Restoration comedy stage
conventions, and the whole panoply of male-female relationships.
Overall, it’s a clever piece of what a programme note refers to as “McGoughière”.
Colin Tierney‘s Alceste is a very fine characterisation of a man who knows
what’s right, does it and then has to live with the consequences. His
beloved, flirtatious Célimène, is
Zara Tempest-Walters, who looks the part but somehow lacks the warmth underneath the socialite exterior that must first have
attracted Alceste. Joining her in the salon for scandal are
Daniel
Goode as the would-be poet Oronte as well as
Leander Deeny and
George Potts as the most fluffy and flowery of sybaritic courtiers,
Clitandre and Acaste.
The voice of common-sense in all this is that of Alceste’s friend
Philante, played by Simon Coates. His acceptance of social custom
eventually leads him to be rewarded with Eliante, Célimène’s
cousin, a young lady made perhaps more silly than she need be by
Alison Pargeter. Director Gemma Bodinetz keeps her cast on the
move, partly through Charlotte Broom‘s choeography. It’s all
sumptuously designed by Michael Taylor, framed by sun-mask
latticework behind which peacock and purple throw the predominantly
white costumes into relief.