Don Carlos
Rose Theatre Kingston
Reviewed – 7th November 2018
β β
“passionless, tedious, and incoherent”
Friedrich Schiller, renowned German writer and radical member of the βstorm and stressβ movement, is not unfamiliar to British audiences, with a well-reviewed production of βDon Carlosβ starring Derek Jacobi and Richard Coyle hitting the West End as recently as 2005. βDon Carlosβ is a prime example of Schiller at work: passionate, witty, and brimming with revolutionary ideas about freedom and power.
Despite some cool aesthetics and apt use of lighting however, this version, produced by Tom Burke and Gadi Rollβs new theatre company Ara, is passionless, tedious, and incoherent. In terms of plot, βDon Carlosβ takes place around the beginning of the Eighty Yearsβ War when Dutch provinces began fighting to free themselves from the rule of Spain and its king, Phillip II. Prince Don Carlosβ former lover recently married his father, and his declarations of love for his new stepmother kick start various court schemes to dispose of prince on one side, and to rebel against the king on the other. How can freedom be won from tyranny, and who will be left to pick up the pieces?
Robert David MacDonaldβs translation β first staged in 1995 – retains the lyricism and wit of the original at times, but in an effort to be βaccurateβ, unfurls absurdly long and convoluted sentences that feel foreign to this contemporary audience. If Roll had been able to perhaps adapt the text to his liking, he may have produced a more engaging and better flowing piece of theatre, allowing the vital themes to shine through without the 18th century linguistic baggage. Furthermore, the actors visibly struggle with this text. Scenes become shouting matches, the actors whipping out lines as fast as they can hoping to create pace and energy but instead just becoming unintelligible. In the verbal carnage, meaning and nuance is lost.
Although Rosanna Vizeβs design, forcing light in actors faces up close and personal, neatly reflects the accusatorial and inquisitorial nature of the plot, the general direction and staging is confused and inconsistent. A dark stage with all actors dressed in black or navy makes the events seem timeless and contemporary but is a dull and monotonous visual choice. There is an obvious desire for pace, and yet scene changes are laborious and slow down the action β itβs a stripped back setting, so why so many chairs, tables, beds? Actors are often stood in parallel and remain there scene after scene. Rollβs sound design, an odd mix of sentimental strings and tension building drums, intrudes obtusely into conversation without any obvious purpose and becomes both distracting and another thing for the actors to shout over.
Burke and Roll have been ambitious, admirably seeking to create stylised drama that goes beyond βthe naturalism of television and filmβ, but they still have much to learn to ensure style does not trample over substance. Be rougher with the classics and donβt allow acting to come second place to design. As a Germanophile, I found this very disappointing.
Reviewed by Joseph Prestwich
Photography by The Other Richard
Don Carlos
Rose Theatre Kingston until 17th November
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde | β β | February 2018
Much Ado About Nothing | β β β β | April 2018
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