Of
the five plays TLC and I saw this past weekend at the Stratford Festival, three
were really superb: Much Ado About
Nothing and Cymbeline, both by
Shakespeare, and Sophocles’s Elektra.
This Much Ado, set in
early-twentieth-century Brazil, showcased one of the Festival’s particular
strengths: really superb performers in all the roles, as opposed to a few
strong actors in principal roles who are then shored up with a
middling-to-adequate cast. The principals were, indeed, superb; Beatrice and
Benedick were played by a real-life couple and I can’t say if that helped the
chemistry between them, but it certainly didn’t hurt. Both Ben Carlson and
Deborah Hay are almost preternaturally likeable, and that made their
characters’ repartee absolutely enthralling. Furthermore, Ms. Hay was a
remarkably delicate, vulnerable and sweet Beatrice, and Mr. Carlson’s affability
kept Benedick’s tirades against her from sounding cruel, as they easily could
have been in the hands of an actor with a harsher demeanor.
It
is worth repeating that the supporting roles were filled with remarkable
actors. Juan Chioran as Don Pedro was leonine, warm and sexy, with a voice I
could bathe in, and Gareth Potter played the Duke’s bastard brother Don John
with determined malevolence that verged on downright gleeful. Tyrone Savage
gave the usually foolish and bland Claudio real depth, and even managed to make
me feel sympathy for a character whose actions often seem inexcusable. His
jilting of Hero at the altar seemed more a sudden loss of nerve than premeditated
cruelty. Hero herself was the only weak point in an otherwise stellar cast, as
Bethany Jillard seemed flat almost unto wooden, and somehow managed not to give
any life to this text that shines even on the page. However, as Hero never
carries the text nor the action, this didn’t damage the overall production too
badly, and the tropical setting set off the play’s fast and witty action
perfectly, filling the stage with sunlight, Latin music and dance.
Cymbeline is tonally much darker,
although the plot also deals with the disgrace of a virtuous woman through
baseless accusations. It’s a tricky play to stage, as it’s one without a clear
protagonist, and the action at different points is carried by any one of a
number of different characters. There are a lot of characters and a lot of
plot, but there is also a lot of heart, and it’s one of my favorite plays in
Shakespeare’s canon. This production was perfect. The director, Antoni
Cimolino, has a rare gift for coaching his actors until the verse sparkles, and
we see the comedy in the dramatic moments and the melancholy in the comic
relief. Every member of the extensive cast was superlative, and in a less
perfect production, any one of them could have been a stand-out performer. Cara
Ricketts was a dream as Innogen, playing her with a backbone of steel but also
with a generous plenty of gentleness and loyalty; as an added bonus, she passed
as a very credible boy in the play’s second half. Tom McCamus found the
pitch-perfect balance of sleaze and sensuality as Iachimo, and I easily
believed that a less virtuous woman than Innogen could have fallen prey to his
charms. (For the record, I am far less virtuous than she. Mr. McCamus: call me.) Mike Shara went full balls-to-the-wall on making Cloten an unlikeable boor - it was a strong choice, but an effective one. Posthumus is, by virtue of
plot necessity, somewhat doltish and easily misled, but Graham Abbey managed to
make his devastation at his wife’s perceived infidelities as heart-wrenching
for the audience as it was for the character. Mr. Abbey has an impressive knack
for shredding through text at a gallop and keeping every word clear, sharp and
specific; he also has a particular strength in stage combat, and his swordfight
in the battle toward the play’s end was superb. The fight scenes as a whole
were exemplary and some of the finest I’ve seen onstage.
Another
shining moment in the play was when the exiled princes, played by E.B. Smith
and Ian Lake, mourn the apparent death of the disguised Innogen. It’s a
beautiful piece of text, full of grief and tenderness, and the work of Mr. Lake
and Mr. Smith heightened the beauty of the verse. I cried real and copious
tears for their loss.
The
staging was spare but evocative; although I generally don’t care for
multiple-era settings, the mixture of Elizabethan, Roman and pre-Christian
British elements was tasteful and effective, and I did not find the pastiche in
the least jarring. The pacing was tight and even, and did not falter even in
the hugely unwieldy final scene during which the plot’s many threads are
unknotted and brought to a tidy conclusion. My only complaint with the play is
that it was over far too soon; after the curtain call I would have willingly
stayed in my seat and watched the whole thing over again. It was, on the whole,
a brilliant piece of theatre, and I am unlikely to see anything nearly so good
again anytime soon.
Coming
up soon: I’ll discuss Elektra, and
I’ll also offer some thoughts on the two productions I saw that were somewhat
less successful (although it is worth noting that both of those were merely
good, as opposed to the other three, which were downright outstanding).
Sounds great! I'm sorry to have missed them. I definitely planned on being there when they announced Much Ado, my favourite Shakespeare play, but it didn't work out. Glad that you had a good time though! :)
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