Written by William Shakespeare
Directed by Imara Savage
Bell Shakespeare/StateSA Theatre Company
The Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre
The Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre
29 October - 9 November, 2013
Review by Len Power 29 October 2013
Review by Len Power 29 October 2013
Shakespeare’s
early play, ‘The Comedy Of Errors’, is a slight work that, if done traditionally
today, would not offer much to interest a modern audience.
Bell
Shakespeare’s jazzy new production is played with only ten actors on a simple
set designed by Pip Runciman of eight double doors stretching across the stage
with changing electronic signs above them to tell us where we are. It’s certainly different to any other version
of the play you might have seen.
Director,
Imara Savage, states in the program, “I was hoping to capture something of the
feeling of a night out, those nights where we stay out until the sun comes up
and in the cold light of day we are able to see everything for what it is.” If that’s what she was aiming for, it wasn’t
clear enough.
The
play is a simple bit of fun about two sets of twins who get mistaken for each
other and cause great confusion until all is resolved at the end of the
play. Unless you’d seen the play before,
this tricky production obscures the storyline so much that it’s hard to work
out who everyone is and what is going on.
The modern day costumes add to the difficulty. Except for the courtesan, the costumes give
no clear visual clues about who each character is supposed to be.
In
this production, the delivery of the words has been given less importance than
the physical comedy. However, there are
some well-played moments of inspired lunacy, especially a sequence involving a
washing machine. The use of slow motion at
various points in the play was imaginative and the eight double doors gave good
opportunities for farcical entrances and exits.
Scene changes flowed very well with the help of the clever lighting
design by Mark Pennington.
One
difficulty when staging this play is finding actors who closely resemble each
other to play the two sets of twins.
Luckily, this was achieved rather well in this production. The standout performance of the evening was
Renato Musolino as the servant, Dromio of Syracuse, who was extremely funny in
the physical comedy but never lost sight of his character or its Shakespearian
origins. Everyone else played their
roles at such a fevered pitch, there was no real character development and the
constant shouting was a bit wearing. The
longer speeches were delivered as if they were just something to be got through
with no depth or feeling for the language.
You
can certainly find a lot to amuse you in this production, but it doesn’t really
have much to do with Shakespeare.