A Midsummer Night's Dream (1998): Oxford Stage Company

PrA Midsummer Night's Dream (
1998
)

Media
Live Performance
Category
Theatre

PRINCIPAL CAST: Christopher Beck (Puck); Nicholas Beveney (Bottom); Simon Coury (Oberon); Matthew Cureton (Lysander); Andrew Fielding (Demetrius); Anna Francolini (Helena); Suzanne Hitchmough (Hermia); Victoria Woodward (Titania).

The tour included the Everyman, Cheltenham from 6 - 10 October 1998; no other dates known currently.

"Shakespearean forests are out of favour this year. First the English Shakespeare Company reduced the Forest of Arden to three mobile metal towers. Now the Oxford Stage Company has gone one further; with stage and backdrop bare of anything that might be even suggestively arboreal. All that is left is a blank floor boxed in with what appear to be plastic roofing panels. Yet the staging lacks the distinct statement of Peter Brook's white box. It is an empty stage, signifying nothing....the overall ambiance of John Retallack's final production for OSC is that of a workshop, a voyage of exploration for the cast which they have not yet completed. For all their polished professionalism, the production itself feels as if it is still in rehearsal....However, Retallack's production excels primarily when it steers full tilt for the play's humour. This is comedy played with a broad brush, firmly within the comic conventions of Nineties television. The lovers are four snappy professionals - Crouch End types whose weekends revolve around cappuccino and Ikea and This Life...Meanwhile, the Mechanicals mine a more slapstick vein of caricature comedy, reminiscent of the old sketch show Three of a Kind. However, some of the edge is lost by the fact that the characters staging the production are drawn with almost as much exaggeration as the bucolic am-drams put before the duke. Nicholas Beveney in particular, as a towering Bottom, might be better advised to rein in his Lenny Henry-esque cartooning. At just over two hours long, with no interval, this production makes mainly physical demands on its audience. It is as good a way as seeing Shakespeare's text staged as any, and the comedy is amusing as most of the offerings of the television schedulers. But I still miss the magic of the forest."  ~ Toby O'Connor Morse, "So what's wrong with trees?", Independent, 4 November 1998

 

Pe People involved in this production