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Marlowe’s Fate

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White Bear Theatre

MARLOWE'S FATE

Marlowe’s Fate

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed – 5th November 2021

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“the charm and energy of the castย  keep things bubbling along”

 

Marloweโ€™s Fate by Peter B. Hodges, and directed by the author, has just opened at the White Bear Theatre in Kennington. Set initially in 1593, the year of Marloweโ€™s death, this is yet another drama dealing with the question of who really wrote Shakespeareโ€™s plays. Answer: Shakespeare. But Shakespeare skeptics around the world will rejoice at a new exhumation on an epic mystery that never seems to stay buried. The set up is this: what if Marlowe didnโ€™t die in a tavern brawl in Deptford, but was, instead, spirited away to Europe as a spy for Queen Elizabeth the First and her Privy Council?

Peter Hodges has chosen to treat this material in a comic way, and itโ€™s certainly more palatable than the alternative. Marloweโ€™s Fate opens in the aforementioned Deptford tavern. Present are the hired assassins, Ingram Frizer, Nicholas Skeres and Robert Poley, discussing the job of dispatching the playwright who has been dazzling London theatre audiences with his Tamburlaine and Doctor Faustus. They are regretful about having to kill him since they are fans. Marlowe himself enters, and is, understandably, a bit upset to discover that he is about to be assassinated. He is only a bit less upset to find out that his death is going to be faked so that he can continue his work as a spy. At this point, Marloweโ€™s Fate becomes not a play about Marloweโ€™s mysterious death, but instead, a play about his eventual return from Europe (if ever). But to Marlowe the playwright, the more important question is this: how he can continue to write, and get his poems and plays out to his adoring public? Well, you guessed it. Enter an uneducated, unsophisticated gloverโ€™s son named Willโ€™m Shaxper (sic) from Stratford upon Avon, looking for work with a local printer.

I wonโ€™t provide spoilers for this Marlovian/Shakespearean romp except to say that it has a little bit of everything. โ€œEverythingโ€ including a rather wonderful impromptu puppet show featuring the Annual Shakespearean Authorโ€™s Challenge that opens the second act. As long as you are comfortable with the way that Marloweโ€™s Fate quickly devolves into absurdity from the few known facts about Christopher Marlowe (and William Shakespeare, for that matter), you will enjoy Hodgesโ€™ work in this spirited production. The play is overly long, and there is way too much exposition needed to explain how everything comes about, but the charm and energy of the cast (particularly Nicholas Limm as Marlowe, and Lewis Allcock as Shaxper) keep things bubbling along. As with most productions at the White Bear Theatre, โ€œgreat reckonings in little roomsโ€ are standard fare here, and the seven actors of Marloweโ€™s Fate donโ€™t let the small space cramp their style. Penn Oโ€™Garaโ€™s costumes and puppets are delightfully and economically made, and Reuben Speedโ€™s Elizabethan tavern design feels appropriately โ€œperiod.โ€

This is definitely a show for Shakespeare scholars seeking a break from another interminable conference, or for graduate students in search of a busmanโ€™s holiday from writing the never ending PhD dissertation. But really, Marloweโ€™s Fate is for anyone who enjoys a good โ€œwhat if?โ€ rather than a โ€œwhodunnit.โ€

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Benji Paris

 

Marlowe’s Fate

White Bear Theatre until 28th November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue this year:
Luck be a Lady | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | June 2021

 

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