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 Jennifer Tang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Tang. Show all posts
Thursday, 23 January 2025
Theatre review: Cymbeline
(Sam Wanamaker Playhouse)
If Love's Labour's Lost can feel like the young Shakespeare workshopping setpieces he would perfect later in his career, Cymbeline could be the older playwright collecting every mad idea he couldn't fit into an earlier play, then throwing them all together to see what happens. The story of Roman Britain sees Princess Innogen (Gabrielle Brooks) separated from her exiled spouse, to be reunited only after a deranged fairytale quest that includes a man hiding in a trunk, a health tonic that's actually a deadly poison that's actually just a sleeping draught, meeting a pair of siblings she never knew existed, and a headless corpse largely played for laughs. The Swanamaker's latest take on the play gender-flips a lot of characters including the titular king; I understand the desire for a powerful female leader figure, but it feels a bit of a pyrrhic victory for that leader to struggle to make an impression because she spends the whole play on more sedatives than a 1980s soap opera housewife.
Monday, 3 April 2023
Theatre review: Further than the Furthest Thing
The directing bursaries that have been a feature at the Young Vic for a while have been moving on to bigger places in the last couple of years: The JMK award has moved from the Clare to the Orange Tree, while the Genesis Fellowship has made a shorter trip, through the bar to the main house. For the latter, Jennifer Tang directs Further than the Furthest Thing, Zinnie Harris' breakout 1999 play inspired by the Tristan da Cunha islands halfway between South America and Africa, and a volcanic eruption that led to the main island being evacuated in 1961. Harris' island isn't named, and has a quasi-mythical nature that means it's probably best not to take the connection too literally. What it does share with Tristan is its tiny population and extreme remoteness - it's visited only once a year by a British ship bringing supplies to supplement the limited crops that can be grown there.
Thursday, 5 May 2016
Theatre review: The Iphigenia Quartet - Agamemnon and Clytemnestra
Two more points of view on the story of Euripides' Iphigenia at Aulis at the
Gate as part of The Iphigenia Quartet; you can read my review of
Iphigenia and Chorus here, but tonight Caroline Bird gets arguably the
toughest job, of trying to see things from the perspective of Agamemnon.
Although it's his brother whose wife has been abducted, Agamemnon (Andrew French) is
leading the Greek charge to get her back, and is therefore the man in the spotlight.
Bird focuses on him not as a bloodthirsty villain but as a rather weak man buffeted
by circumstance and unable or unwilling to stand up to it. As the play begins he's
consented to the sacrifice of his daughter but changed his mind, sending a letter to
his wife telling her to stay away. It's too late, of course, and besides the
Messenger (Louise McMenemy) is brutally pragmatic about the Greek cause and makes
sure the letter doesn't reach Clytemnestra.
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