Tag Archives: Arthur Hughes

THE KING’S SPEECH

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Watermill Theatre

THE KING’S SPEECH at the Watermill Theatre

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“Peter Sandys-Clarke gives an excellent performance as the β€˜dear, dear man’ held in a vocal prison by his childhood trauma.”

Playwright David Seidler (1937–2024) developed a stammer at the age of three as his family travelled from the UK to the US in the early years of World War II. One of three ships in their convoy was destroyed by German U-Boats. Many kinds of speech therapy failed him until at the age of 16, and in a frustrated rage he shouted out the F-word.

Out of this traumatic experience came a playwright, and also his most memorable work, the screenplay for the film The King’s Speech, which is based on a true story. But Seidler’s wife said β€˜why don’t you write it as a play?’, realising that the spatial limitations of theatre would enable it to focus on the key relationship at the heart of the piece. The 2010 film, starring Colin Firth and Geoffrey Rush, was produced to great acclaim and won four Academy Awards. In 2012 the play opened in Guildford before touring the world in nine different languages.

The delightfully intimate Watermill Theatre is The Stage’s Theatre of the Year and has a reputation for unique shows which last long in the memory. This revival brilliantly embodies that tradition.

Directed by former Almeida resident director Emma Butler with insightful lighting by Ryan Day, and striking costume and set design by Bretta Gerecke, the play sheds new light on a much-loved and deeply poignant story.

The first act moves rapidly with a lot of plot to cover and many brief scenes, with a greater and more compelling focus after the interval.

If you have seen the film, you will recall that the relationship between the future King George VI (Peter Sandys-Clarke) and his wayward speech therapist Lionel Logue (Arthur Hughes) is the nub of the story. β€˜Bertie’ the monarch-to-be is inventively dressed as β€˜a thing of threads and patches’ – in a half-made suit that symbolises his status as a future king and as a stutterer β€˜trapped in a broken body over which he has no control’. This symbolism is echoed in the set which consists largely of a disordered arc of swirling timber.

Peter Sandys-Clarke gives an excellent performance as the β€˜dear, dear man’ held in a vocal prison by his childhood trauma. We see him fail to speak coherently at Wembley Stadium and the abuse to which he is subjected by his family. Against a backdrop of great affairs of state, including the death of a king and the abdication of another, an intimate and touching story of deepening friendship is played out between a plain-speaking Aussie and a very believably austere royal. Arthur Hughes shines as the genial and irreverent therapist, his performance somehow made all the more poignant by his own slight physical disability.

Aamira Challenger gives an elegantly restrained performance as the Princess Elizabeth and Jim Kitson makes the most of some excellent lines as a bluff and bustling Winston Churchill and King George V.

Rosa Hesmondhalgh (Myrtle Logue/Wallis Simpson) is endearing as an Australian shopgirl who gets invited to sit with the royals at a coronation. Christopher Naylor made the most of his role as the scheming Archbishop, Cosmo Lang and cricket sweater wearing Stephen Rahman-Hughes gives a new take on David, the Duke of Windsor who so memorably stood down from the throne as he could not uphold it without β€˜the help and support of the woman I love’.

This wonderful revival is a delight.


THE KING’S SPEECH at the Watermill Theatre

Reviewed on 24th September 2024

by David Woodward

Photography by Alex Brenner

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BARNUM | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | July 2024
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2024
THE LORD OF THE RINGS | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | August 2023
MANSFIELD PARK | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2023
RAPUNZEL | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2022
WHISTLE DOWN THE WIND | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | July 2022

THE KING’S SPEECH

THE KING’S SPEECH

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La Cage Aux Folles

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Park Theatre

La Cage Aux Folles

La Cage Aux Folles

Park Theatre

Reviewed – 19th February 2020

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“a gem of a play, tightly timed and focussed”

 

Simon Callow’s translation of this celebrated French farce is a triumph of hilarious camp, full of double entendres, sparkly dresses and genuine affection. Georges and Albin are a gay couple, living above the Cage Aux Folles nightclub. Albin is its ageing star who still looks good in a frock, but is no longer the sexy sylph. Georges is the harassed manager, continually fending of crises. They bicker and squabble, but, as Michael Matus and Paul Hunter show, they still love each other anyway. But their world is about to be turned upside down. Georges’ son Laurent arrives and announces that he is getting married, and that his girlfriend and her parents are coming to stay. Unfortunately the parents are conservative in the extreme, and the father is running for election on a ticket of morality and rectitude. How can Georges rearrange and tame his gorgeously queeny household and survive their arrival? That is the central dilemma that drives the action, and it is quite a task!

Syrus Lowe is a total class act as the screamingly camp and beautiful employee, Jacob. He struts and pouts his way through the play with a charming outrageousness and his attempt to walk in men’s shoes instead of his high heels is a masterpiece of physical comedy. By the time Laurent’s girlfriend Muriel and her the parents arrive the apartment has been transformed from its boudoir aesthetic to something almost monastic, complete with crucifix, Tim Shorthall’s design creating the physical changes Laurent persuades Georges to make, in his attempt to portray a β€˜respectable’ family. Of course, it all goes horribly wrong. Laurent has invited his absentee mother to dinner much to the horror of Georges and Albin, and Albin has given up in his attempt to play the masculine uncle, opting for a totally different role that complicates everything. As the dinner party goes rapidly downhill the club downstairs is plunging into chaos and Georges has to act. Throughout the play other drag artists appear from downstairs and a reporter snoops around, looking for dirt. The reporter is played by Mark Cameron, who also has a hilarious cameo as the butcher, a tough guy macho man who turns out to have an unlikely love of art.

Jez Bond has directed a gem of a play, tightly timed and focussed, but feeling like an outrageous disaster as all good farce should. I hope this gets a transfer after it’s life at the Park. It deserves it.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Mark Douet

 


La Cage Aux Folles

Park Theatre until 21st March

 

LastΒ  ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Black Chiffon | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2019
Mother Of Him | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2019
Fast | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2019
Stray Dogs | β˜… | November 2019
Sydney & The Old Girl | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2019
Martha, Josie And The Chinese Elvis | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2019
The Snow Queen | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2019
Rags | β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2020
Shackleton And His Stowaway | β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2020
Time And Tide | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2020

 

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