Theatre Record

 

This Edition

 

Issue 16 / 17 - 2006

Prompt Corner Click to enlarge

What a lot of poor reviews A Right Royal Farce got! As you know, Theatre Record doesn't carry reviews' star ratings, but it's worthy of remark that even Nicholas de Jongh has never, to the best of his recollection, given a no-star review before. If I were Ian Herbert, I might at this point embark on a nobly contrarian defence of Toby Young and Lloyd Evans' piece; but I'm not, so instead I shall simply point out that I told you so a year ago. The faults of A Right Royal Farce are exactly the same as those of Who's The Daddy?, Young & Evans' 2005 farce about bed-hopping at The Spectator magazine: no sense of pace or momentum, direction and performances which generally make Spitting Image look like Ingmar Bergman, and a reliance on jeering rather than wit.

The question is why did so many of us indulge this kind of exercise when it was directed at media folk and a politico, yet turn their noses up when the same approach was applied to the royal family? I don't think it's due to any hangover of feudal allegiance to the latter, not even of the "oh, bad show, when they can't answer back" kind – we all know that various royal press officers can spin and leak with every bit as much dedication as their political counterparts. I'm inclined to believe that we embraced Who's The Daddy? (those of us who did) because of the location of its subject matter: close enough to us that we could seem good sports by chuckling along, far enough away that its mud-flinging didn't leave any noticeable marks on us.

Sporadic

Not reprinted in this issue, but available on the Guardian's web site, is a piece written by Young & Evans in that paper's "Yes, But..." column (renamed from "Right Of Reply", perhaps in an effort to seem less confrontational or to discourage writers from digging their heels in). In this piece they profess astonishment at the strength of the negative reaction, protesting that "Everyone laughed on press night, except the critics." Perhaps Young and Evans were at a different press night from the one I attended, which was punctuated only by sporadic titters, and those largely of the "I can't believe this is happening" kind; in fact, Evans almost certainly was – his apparent absence on press night was the subject of some comment amongst our colleagues.

The authors, of course, enjoy the last laugh, professing that the show played to packed houses, and smirk, "this is worrying to us as critics. Our revered profession now looks almost redundant"... thus revealing two fundamental misconceptions: the first being that criticism either is intended or able to influence box-office significantly, the second that popularity equals quality, by which reasoning the Big Mac is the pinnacle of haute cuisine and Heat magazine the zenith of the literary periodical. Remember: he who laughs last probably didn't get the joke.

Stilted

Mind you, I've often felt that way about various works myself. It was, for instance, only towards the end of my third year of doctoral research on James Joyce that it was delicately hinted to me that I might be barking up the wrong tree altogether. It was with great relief, then, that I saw James Macdonald's production of Joyce's Exiles and found it entirely faithful to my conception of the play. The trouble is that that conception holds it to be dull, stilted and almost entirely unsuccessful. I admire Joyce's prose to the point of idolatry (and probably beyond), but it has to be acknowledged that he was not a master of all forms. His verse was by and large trite and sentimental, and Exiles, his only play, betrays his own immense admiration for Ibsen without showing a similar grasp of what makes for drama.

Contrary to claims in some reviews, Peter McDonald is not either excessively underplaying his part as protagonist Richard Rowan nor slightly bewildered as to what tone to adopt; he is playing the character as written. Try as I might, I cannot find in myself the enthusiasm that others do for the psychological acuity and explicitness of the dialogue, when it these are vested in characters who are neither real by the standards of drama in Joyce's day or ours, nor hyperrealistically vibrant as are those in his novels and stories. I am extremely glad to have had the opportunity to see the play, but I think once may be enough for this lifetime.

Ian Shuttleworth || ian@theatrerecord.com

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Contents / Reviews

London

       

THE 39 STEPS New adaptation by Patrick Barlow from novel by John Buchan

Tricycle

14 Aug

9 Sep

914

BABE, THE SHEEP-PIG Revival of adaptation by David Wood from book by Dick King-Smith

Open Air

3 Aug

26 Aug

912

THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIRCLE Revival of play by Bertolt Brecht (Steam Industry)

The Scoop

4 Aug

17 Sep

906

CHRISTINE New play by Dirk de Villiers

New End

16 Aug

10 Sep

905

THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Revival of play by Shakespeare

Globe

1 Aug

7 Oct

896

CYCLOPS! New adaptation by Phil Willmott from Euripides (Steam Industry)

The Scoop

18 Aug

17 Sep

906

DANCE HALL DAYS Revival of play by Rosalind Scanlon (Irish Repertory Th)

Riverside

8 Aug

27 Aug

927

DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOUR DAUGHTER IS? New play by Angie Le Mar

Hackney Empire, Acorn

9 Aug

2 Sep

895

ELGAR: STIRRING THE SPIRIT New play by Justin Pearson with music by Edward Elgar

ICA

21 Aug

25 Aug

930

EXILES Revival of play by James Joyce (NT)

Cottesloe

2 Aug

26 Oct

899

FROST/NIXON New play by Peter Morgan

Donmar Warehouse

15 Aug

7 Oct

917

MACBETH Revival of play by Shakespeare

Hampton Court, Great Hall

7 Aug

7 Aug

907

MEDEA Revival of play by Euripides (giudecca)

Bridewell

8 Aug

31 Aug

930

A RIGHT ROYAL FARCE New play by Toby Young and Lloyd Evans

King's Head

31 Jul

28 Aug

892

SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN BROTHERS Revival of musical by Gene De Paul and Johnny Mercer

Haymarket

16 Aug

1 Jan

924

Sextet New plays in rep (National Youth Theatre), including:

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

The Astronaut Wives' Club New play by Al Smith

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

Blue Moon Over Poplar New play by Rebecca Lenkiewicz

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

Fish And Company New play by Samuel Adamson

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

Prime Resident New play by Stella Duffy

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

Still Killing Time New play by Barrie Keeffe

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

Unstoned New play by Amy Evans

Soho

7 Aug

2 Sep

908

SUGAR MUMMIES New play by Tanika Gupta

Royal Court

10 Aug

2 Sep

909

THE TRAGEDY OF MASTER ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM Revival of anonymous Elizabethan play

White Bear

8 Aug

27 Aug

916

THE VEGEMITE TALES Return of Melanie Tait play

Venue

2 Aug

14 Oct

923

VICTOR'S LAMENT New play by Adam Riches

Hen & Chickens

10 Aug

26 Aug

922

VIRAL SUTRA New play by David Carter

Finborough

17 Aug

2 Sep

913

YERMA Revival of Frank McGuinness adaptation from Federico Garcia Lorca

Arcola

25 Aug

23 Sep

928

Regions

       

HENRY VI parts 1, 2 and 3 Revival of plays by Shakespeare (RSC, Complete Works)

Stratford, Courtyard

9 Aug

21 Oct

939

HENRY VIII Revival of play by Shakespeare (RSC, Complete Works)

Stratford, Holy Trinity Church

24 Aug

2 Sep

944

KING JOHN Revival of play by Shakespeare (RSC, Complete Works)

Stratford, Swan

3 Aug

10 Oct

931

LOOK BACK IN ANGER Revival of play by John Osborne (Peter Hall Co)

Bath, Theatre Royal

22 Aug

2 Sep

946

LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST Revival of play by Shakespeare (Shakespeare Th Co, Complete Works)

Stratford, Swan

17 Aug

26 Aug

943

MY OWN SHOW New play by Lesley Bruce

Scarborough, Stephen Joseph

22 Aug

9 Sep

948

THE TEMPEST Revival of play by Shakespeare (RSC, Complete Works)

Stratford, Royal Shakespeare

8 Aug

12 Oct

933

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