A revival of Jimmy Murphy’s 2000 play at the Gaiety proves its staying power as a potent mix of raucous comedy, physical menace, and despair.
4/5
A revival of Jimmy Murphy’s 2000 play at the Gaiety proves its staying power as a potent mix of raucous comedy, physical menace, and despair.
4/5
John Carney’s indie film that could returns home as an unusual musical with a book by playwright Enda Walsh and originating director John Tiffany helming. Here’s a teaser of my review for HeadStuff.org.
Here’s a teaser.
Tiffany is responsible for the highly disconcerting set-up in which the audience can clamber onstage and buy a drink while the ensemble plays a number of Irish and Czech folksongs, so that the actual busking opening of the play emerges seamlessly out of a session. As our hero (Tony Parsons) finishes busking, he is accosted by a go-getting Czech musician (Megan Riordan) who insists he must (a) not give up on music, and (b) fix her vacuum cleaner. For he and Da (Billy Murphy) live above their hoover-repair shop in the North Strand, a life straitened by death and desertion. Her life is fuller. She lives with her mother Baruska (Sandra Callaghan), and three Czech flatmates; death metal drummer Svec (Rickie O’Neill), ambitious ‘burger-boy’ Andrej (Dylan Reid), and skimpily-clad man-eater Reza (Ruth Westley). With this injection of energy a burnt-out busker may stand a chance of recording a successful demo…
Click here to read the full review on HeadStuff.org.
The Abbey amazingly hasn’t staged King Lear since the early 1930s. Director Selina Cartmell thus has no legendary productions of Shakespeare’s bleakest tragedy to outshine.
All dark, and comfortless
The aged Lear (Owen Roe) has decided to split his kingdom between his three daughters. But, while the scheming diabolical siblings Regan (Caoilfhionn Dunne) and Goneril (Tina Kellegher) flatter him to get their rightful shares, Lear’s only good-hearted daughter Cordelia (Beth Cooke) refuses to lie or exaggerate, enraging the vain Lear; and her share is thus split between her sisters’ husbands Cornwall (Phelim Drew) and Albany (John Kavanagh). Cordelia leaves without a dowry to become the Queen of France and the noble courtier Kent (Sean Campion) is banished for taking her part in the quarrel. He disguises himself to serve Lear, but the scheming bastard Edmund (Ciaran Mcmenamin) uses the fraught situation to eliminate his legitimate brother Edgar (Aaron Monaghan) from the line of succession to Gloucester (Lorcan Cranitch); exploiting the political chaos that Lear’s wise Fool (Hugh O’Connor) foresaw…
I found myself comparing Cartmell’s interpretation of the text to Sarah Finlay’s 2010 production starring Ger Adlum because Gaby Rooney’s costume design replicated its colour-coded royal houses, both productions being indebted to Kurosawa’s Kagemusha. But instead of Finlay’s icily austere minimalism Cartmell offered rich medieval costuming, wolfhounds lurching around between scenes, and a second storey built onto the Abbey stage to add a period gallery to the drunken carousing in castles below. Garance Marnuer’s layered set design sends a triangle into the audience for characters to deliver their monologues, so that in the front rows the eye is caught by actors on three levels; and that’s before the triangle spectacularly rises for the heath scene. Given such impressive staging the climactic fight with long-staffs between Edmund and Edgar surprises with its sheer inertness and lack of ambition in clashing choreography…
Cartmell’s commitment to visual medievalism though clashes with her highlighting of the paganism in Shakespeare’s most nihilistic play. ‘Nothing comes from nothing’ proclaims Lear in a famously pre-Christian thought, and the illuminated paganism is truly chilling in one scene in which Lear, holding an antler skull to channel power, calls down a curse on the heavily pregnant Goneril to make her miscarry for her ill treatment of him. But… there are constant references to Greek philosophers and Roman gods, and why would they be invoked if you believed in animist gods or pantheism? Especially as Gloucester’s “As flies are to wanton boys so are we to the gods/They kill us for their sport” screams of the capricious Greek divinities. And that’s before you wonder what historical neverland Cartmell has situated her post-Roman but pre-Christian nations of France and England in…
Cartmell coaxes many strong performances. Roe is appropriately magisterial as Lear, while Monaghan is fiercely committed as Edgar’s alter-ego Poor Tom (even if John Healy was not the only one coughing Gollum), and Cooke’s Cordelia shedding a tear when Lear finally recognises her in his madness is extremely affecting. Dunne makes Regan’s villainy a progressive revelation, while Drew gives some richness to the oft one-note psychotic Cornwall, and Ronan Leahy stands out from the ensemble with empathetic nuance as he counsels Gloucester and Cordelia. Kellegher’s Goneril though lacks subtlety, and Mcmenamin’s Edmund, emphasising his discordant Northern accent and swanking around in black, at times appears to be in an entirely different play. Cranitch’s straightforward Gloucester meanwhile failed to match KH T’*’s 2010 camp lecherous interpretation, making his eye-gouging less traumatic despite some truly horrific gouged eye-socket makeup. He certainly wasn’t helped though by both beard and gouged-eye makeup peeling off on the night I went…
This is a good production that has a number of great performances, but some disappointing turns and an inconsistency in tackling the text hold it back from true greatness.
3/5
King Lear continues its run at the Abbey until the 23rd of March.