Thoughts and Critiques

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As You Like It at the National Theatre

by Lisa on January 6, 2016 posted in Theater, London

The set of Branagh’s Winter’s Tale was magically conceived and realized, and the set of As You Like It at the National was also magical in its own way. The opening scene at court is presented as a colorful but claustrophobic office, bringing to mind the worst of a Wall Street trading office perhaps, and Orlando’s reduced status is blatantly telegraphed by showing him as one of the office cleaning staff, with his brother in a business suit.

The coup de théâtre occurs in the transition to the Forest of Arden, when the entire set is pulled up by hidden cables to create a forest of suspended desks and chairs. It’s quite stunning, and the rest of the play takes place under this tangled mass. Which was the problem for me. Why should the Forest of Arden look like a blackened post-apocalyptic landscape? Or a post-apocalyptic Ikea? And what can the sheep possibly find to graze on in this landscape? (I pass over the illogic of a wrestling match in the office, as well as Rosalind and Celia also in the office in their pj’s—Hello Kitty for Celia!—before they take off for the forest).

Photo: Johan Persson

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Kenneth Branagh’s Winter’s Tale

by Lisa on January 4, 2016 posted in Theater, London

A Winter’s Tale is one of Shakespeare’s so-called romances, those odd late plays that somehow overcome their tragic beginnings with hard-earned love and forgiveness. I’ve seen it before and been left cold. In fact, I have an unpleasant memory of sleeping through much of the Bohemian festival at the ART some years ago. So what made the production by Kenneth Branagh at the Garrick theater different?

Photo: Johan Persson

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