Remember when Anne-Marie Duff was best known as Fiona from Shameless, rather than as a harbinger of dodgy plays? Me neither.
Duff and Rory Kinnear were paired up as the Macbeths in a scene for the RSC’s 2016 Shakespeare celebration special, but it’s the National that’s brought them together again for a full production. Much has been made of the fact that this Macbeth is Rufus Norris’ first time directing Shakespeare in 25 years, and only his second ever, an admission that’s inevitably come back to haunt a production whose negative critical reaction has been hard to miss, even if you try to avoid reviews and spoilers. Coming in with low expectations can sometimes mean you’re pleasantly surprised, and I guess at least we can say that Duff hasn’t landed herself in something quite as unwatchable as Common again (Ian and I both actually came back after the interval this time.) Norris has moved the play’s setting from mediaeval Scotland to a post-apocalyptic near future where supplies are scarce and gangs in makeshift armour fight over what’s left.
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 Hannah Hutch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hannah Hutch. Show all posts
Thursday, 22 March 2018
Theatre review: Macbeth (National Theatre & tour)
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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