The Miser by Moliere.
Written in a modern translation by Justin Fleming. Directed by Peter Evans. Designer Anna Treagloan. Lighting designer. Matt Cox. Composer and Sound Designer . Max Lyandvert. Mpvement and fight director. Nigel Poulton. Voice and text coach. Jess Chambers. Bell Shakespeare Company. The Playhouse. Canberra Theatre Centre. April 12 to 20 2019. Bookings: www.canberra theatre centre.com.au 0r 62752700
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
John Bell as Harpagon in Bell Shakespeare's The Miser |
The Miser Harpagon stands alone,
clutching and caressing his precious box of ten thousand gold crowns. The lights fade on a sombre moment of puzzled
realization after the four doors of the single walled set close behind him. It
signals the final departure of his daughter
Elise, engaged to his maid Valére, and his son, Cleante, finally free to
marry his ardent love, Mariane.
Bell Shakespeare’s production of
Moliere’s The Miser sparkles with wit and style. It’s a gem of a show, wickedly
mischievous in its biting satire and furiously contemporary in Justin Fleming’s
adaptation. Director Peter Evans, working ingeniously with designer Anna
Tregloan’s set of doors has turned this
boldly modern version into farce with lightning entrances and exits to dazzle
and delight.
A stellar cast, headed by the
irrepressible John Bell, and under the fast and flashy direction of Evans, revel in the spirit of classic Moliere.
The stock characters, drawn from the traditional Commedia dell’ Arte are
readily identifiable. John Bell as Commedia’s Pantalone, the crotchety, miserly
patriarch makes a welcome return to the company that he founded thirty years
ago. His slovenly unkempt entry in coarse singlet and trousers held up by
braces over his stooped frame mark him as a man of poverty, belying his hidden wealth.
His crackling, sharp as barbed wire accent is coarse, broad Australian and his
demeanour spits vitriol. Bell’s performance, later transformed into an oozing,
bewigged and sleazy suitor to Mariane (Elizabeth Nabbin) brilliantly epitomizes
the lean and scrawny, mean spirited and avaricious nature of a Pantalone. The
production is worth seeing for Bell’s transformative performance alone.
But that should in no way diminish
the stellar performances of a cast that eagerly embrace the pace and pressure
of playing farce. The characters leap from the Commedia tradition and the
Moliere canon. Each character is impeccably
researched, and yet refreshingly modern, with an ipad toting Chief of Police
(Russel Smith), while retaining the classical semblance of the bewigged Signor Anselm , grandiosely played by Sean O’Shea
or the flamboyantly costumed Francine played with excessive fervour and cunning by Michelle
Doake as the wonderfully ebullient and impetuous
Arlecchino character of the production.
Michelle Doake as Francine. Elizabeth Nabbin as
Mariane and Damien Strouthos as Cleante
|
The victims of this comedy of
mixed messages and social manners are the lovers Cleante (Damien Strouthos) and
Mariane. Fleming’s translation takes mischievous liberty with Moliere’s
original by letting his idiomatic rhyme surprise with an opening lover’s tryst
between Elise (Harriet Gordon Anderson) and Valére (Jessica Tovey), thus
complicating the frantic deceptions even more. Cognisant of the passing of three hundred and fifty years, Fleming
lends his translation a feistier touch. Elise and Cleante, though firmly kept
beneath their father’s niggardly will, are bolder in their retorts, children of
will, aided and abetted by Francine and Valére against the forces of the
bumbling clownish cook cum driver, Jamie Oxenbould. Bell Shakespeare’s The Miser draws out a more contemporary
family conflict, yet with the universal rules of status that apply. It is what
makes this production so immediately accessible.
All’s well that ends well for
lovers and the like, though not for a man left bewildered and confused by his
own vices. To discover the ending and the revelation that seals Harpagon’s
ultimate fate, you will need to see this immaculately staged comedy. I will
offer no spoilers other than to augur a happy ending. The Miser is rarely
staged, and certainly not as Fleming’s sharp and hilarious version, or by
a cast so attuned to the ridiculous and potentially perilous nature of the
human condition, its frailties and its love.
Photos by Prudence Upton
Photos by Prudence Upton