Twelfth Night
Jack Studio Theatre
Reviewed – 17th January 2020
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“Itβs hard to figure out which is greater, the vibrant whole or the sum of its high-calibre parts”
Yard Players follow up a successful production of King Lear by whip-panning to the other end of Shakespeareβs spectrum, staging his seasonal romantic comedy at the same venue. The audienceβs age range suggests Director (and Set Designer) James Eleyβs plan to make the classics accessible to all is working, though Twelfth Night traditionally doesnβt need much help, with enough pranks, set pieces and comedy devices to please any post-Christmas crowd.
An intelligent and thorough production starts by shifting Illyria to Northern England, bringing the enjoyable impression that Viola (Jessica Kinsey, sole survivor from King Lear) is shipwrecked somewhere off the shore of Grimsby, then finds herself in the thrall of Duke Orsino (Duncan Drury) a lovestruck local aristocrat who previously had only his Alexa to talk to. In this world, Andrew Aguecheek (also Duncan Drury) is a gratingly braying twit in a flat cap with more money than brain cells and Maria (Heloise Spring) is a lairy troublemaker in tracksuit and hoop earrings.
New jokes are heaped upon 400-year-old ones with a mania that makes the arrival of Violaβs twin, Sebastian (James Viller), in an earnest scene with saviour, Antonio (Daniel Chrisostomou), a huge and welcome relief. This change of pace, style and mood is also a helpful signpost for the arrival of the main plot, a directorial ploy that is used again in the second half, when Malvolio (Daniel Chrisostomou again), as protagonist of the comedic sub-plot, is tormented. As the lighting changes, pinioning him in a red spotlight surrounded by darkness, his comedy becomes tragic and his sub-plot starts to usurp the main story. By the end, Malvolioβs βnotorious wrongβ carries the greater dramatic weight, overshadowing the supposedly symmetrical love matches that are intended to set things right and send audience spirits soaring.
If it opts for a darker denouement, there is no lack of joy in the performance and creative arts. The substance Daniel Chrisostomou manages to invest in both Malvolio and Antonio gives the production its unusual gravitational force, but it is balanced on the comedy side of the scale by Pete Picton, who is as watchable a Sir Toby Belch as you could find at any ticket price, sowing confusion and enmity with the blamelessness only a drunkard can expect to pull off. James Eleyβs nautically themed set is both impactful and detailed and Maeve McCarthy’s compositions are apt in their scene-setting, if rustically played, while Paul Lennoxβs Lighting Design, as mentioned, is sparingly deployed but emphatic.
Itβs hard to figure out which is greater, the vibrant whole or the sum of its high-calibre parts. Characters occasionally seem to be performing in different comedic genres alongside each other, but the ensemble playing is fast moving, the mischief and malevolence isnβt ignored, and some moments of empathy and pathos slip through at surprising moments.
Reviewed by Dominic Gettins
Photography by Yard Players
Twelfth Night
Jack Studio Theatre until 1st February
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Cinderella | β β β | December 2018
Gentleman Jack | β β β β | January 2019
Taro | β β β Β½ | January 2019
As A Man Grows Younger | β β β | February 2019
Footfalls And Play | β β β β β | February 2019
King Lear | β β β | March 2019
The Silence Of Snow | β β β | March 2019
Queen Of The Mist | β β β Β½ | April 2019
The Strange Case Of Jekyll & Hyde | β β β β β | September 2019
Moby Dick | β β β β β | October 2019
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