Christopher Eccleston has spent so much time recently vocally trying to disassociate himself from Doctor Who that it's hard to remember he's ever done anything else. His latest role sees him return to the stage, for the first time at the RSC, to play the title role in Macbeth. As so often happens with Shakespeare plays (especially those on the syllabus) multiple productions have arrived at the same time, and this one coincides with the critically-panned version at the National. Well, Polly Findlay's production is infinitely more watchable than Rufus Norris', but in some ways is just as problematic. Right from the opening, Findlay and designer Fly Davis show they're not short of interesting ideas, as the audience enters to find King Duncan (David Acton) asleep in his bed, a trio of little girls looking on. These are the witches whose prophecies will turn the tide of the story when Macbeth and Banquo (Raphael Sowole) encounter them soon after a battle.
Writing down what I think about theatre I've seen in That London, whether I've been asked to or not.
Showing posts with label David Acton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Acton. Show all posts
Saturday, 7 April 2018
Theatre review: Macbeth (RSC / RST & Barbican)
Friday, 8 January 2016
Theatre review: Jane Wenham, the Witch of Walkern
You don't see a lot of theatre about witch-hunts - presumably because Arthur
Miller's The Crucible is so widely regarded (if not necessarily by me) as a
masterpiece, that anything else would be held up to comparison. It's not put off
Rebecca Lenkiewicz though, as she not only revisits the paranoia in Jane Wenham,
the Witch of Walkern, she also finds a new and bitingly topical metaphor in the
theme: Society's poor, old and disabled being demonised, scapegoated and ultimately
disposed of. The village of Walkern in Generic Rural Accentshire saw its share of
witch trials and executions in the 17th century, and decades later, when everyone
thinks things are calming down, they flare up again. As the play opens a woman has
just been hanged as a witch, leaving behind a distressed and sexually confused
daughter, Ann (Hannah Hutch.)
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