Let's get the important questions out of the way right up front: there is a King Charles Spaniel in Nell Gwynn, Jessica Swale's new play going up at Shakespeare's Globe. She is only in one scene, and she received entrance and exit applause. Her real name is Molly. Her character's name is Oliver Cromwell.
Yes, it's the Restoration: King Charles II is on the throne, the theatres are open again, and actor-managers are trying to figure out how to remake English drama after a ten-year break. Killigrew (Richard Katz), head of the King's Men, learns that his rivals have a brilliant idea, which has recently been given the king's seal of approval: an actress. If they want to compete, they need one, too.
Luckily for him, his leading man Charles Hart (Jay Taylor) has just the girl waiting in the wings. In between making love to her, he's been training up the orange-seller Nell Gwynn (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) in the art of acting. This tangled mess of motivations-- love, art, economic advantage-- are a tidy preview of the trials to come as Nell charts her ascent from selling oranges to wooing the King of England. The journey is fantastically fun, easily the most unceasingly delightful show at the Globe this summer, but also has a genuine heart.
In the theatre, Nell meets a buoyantly hilarious cast of oddballs, including Graham Butler's neurotic playwright John Dryden, Angus Imrie as the endearingly dumb Ned Spiggett, and Amanda Lawrence's scene-stealingly funny Nancy, the company seamstress and Nell's eventual confidante. The first act is largely a delightful take on the 'putting on a show' trope, interspersed with music and real questions about the nature and purpose of the theatre as it faces a seismic shift.
The play's attempts to insist that the Restoration was the birth of the Strong Female Character, and its repeated dismissal of every single female role of the early modern period as worthless were unconvincing and felt a bit lazy. Killigrew, trying to persuade John Dryden that he'll have more fun writing for real women, points out that because they're real, 'they don't have to be so feminine all the time.' It's a shame that this interesting idea is never quite explored, nor is the alternate subjectivity offered by the first (known) woman writers to have their plays professionally produced (though Aphra Behn gets a shout-out near the end).
However, the first act particularly raised the specter of questions that have been swirling around the theatrical world with particular fervor lately. Former leading lady Edward Kynaston's (Greg Haiste) frantic insistence that the inclusion of those people will only sully the pure, traditional nature of his art sounds all too much like arguments recently used by those who insist that Verdi's Otello must be done in blackface, or The Mikado in yellowface.
Less time is spent filling in the side characters in the court (though Sasha Waddell earns her moment of humanity as Barbara, Lady Castlemaine), with the compelling exception of King Charles. With Nell, David Sturzaker's giddily libidinous Charles can begin to tentatively reveal that his chronic indecision is not a result of stupidity or indifference, but the searing, unfaded memory of his father's execution, and his fear that any decisive action he takes will prove equally fatal. It's not the most rousing defense of Charles's legacy-- but then again, as Nell herself says, who cares? She only troubles herself with the opinions of people she's actually met.
It's this perspective that makes Nell Gwynn, at its heart, a love story: not just the romance of the King and the Orange-Girl, but the many loves of Nell herself-- yes, the king, but also Charles Hart, also her family, also the theatre. Mbatha-Raw is effervescent and charming. She flirts like a master, but performs onstage with an almost self-consciously girlish glee. Her frank acceptance of who she is and what she has been is the source of both her power and her charm, and you never pause to wonder why every man who meets her seems to fall in love.
The show combines to be much more than the sum of its parts. Propped up by excellent performances and sharp direction by Christopher Luscombe, Swale's greatest success is in capturing a chaotic, spirited tone of an era and art in turmoil, eschewing strong political statements (save feminist ones) for weaving a web of characters' rumors and opinions. The blurred lines between onstage and off, audience and actor, stage and court, jumble together to give the entire play an expansive, popular feel that suits the Globe perfectly.
Also there's a dog.
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Link/Review: King Lear With Sheep
I saw and reviewed King Lear With Sheep for Litro. There are actually sheep.
Sunday, September 13, 2015
That Victorian Lady, the Globe, and Authenticity
Certain corners of the internet have been fascinated by a Vox post by Sarah A. Chrisman, a woman who claims that she and her husband live
their entire lives in an accurately Victorian fashion. She never explains how
they came by a Victorian-era computer for blogging, but she does indeed blog
and has written several books detailing how they come by and live with their
period-accurate clothes and technology.
There have been a lot of really interesting pieces
discussing the family, mostly negatively. Chrisman’s idolization of the
Victorian era seems either cheerfully blind to, or disturbingly accepting of
the sexist, racist, imperialist aspects of 19th century English
culture. She also claims that she and her husband are historians (which they
are, somehow) and that their Victorian reenactment is actually a large-scale
research project, an experiment which has allowed them more authentic access to
the period they study.
Questions about the place of reconstruction and reenactment
are continually hovering in the air at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, where I
worked for the past seven months. The Globe now has two performance spaces: the
Globe itself, occasional home to all-male ‘original practices’ (OP)
productions; and the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, modeled after the indoor theatres
of the Jacobean period, and host of the Research in Action series, curated by
scholars and intended to explore the interaction between Jacobean scenes and
the theatre space.
I’ve always loved history (and dressing up!) and the Victorian
couple’s thinking brought to mind my own reasons for wanting to undertake the
course of study at the Globe that I’ve just finished. I wrote in my admissions
essay how seeing the Globe’s OP Twelfth
Night had completely transformed my understanding of the play; I was sure
that this transformation was because the production was all-male, in period
costume and make-up, using period music and props. I hope it’s a credit to the
program itself that I am now convinced it was only the sheen of authenticity
that was so seductive (though it was still a great production). The most
obvious example is the fact that I didn’t even see Twelfth Night at the Globe, I saw it on Broadway. My ‘authentic’
Jacobean experience was mediated through the 19th century American
architecture, designed to facilitate theatrical experiences with goals very
different from those of an early modern play.
But even if I had seen it at the Globe, we’d still have to assume
that the Globe is a perfectly accurate reconstruction (which we can’t know if
it is), and swap out Mark Rylance and Paul Chahidi for boys or young men (and
how old or young, exactly, would they be?), and assume that the play had been
staged and rehearsed in keeping with early modern rehearsal and staging
practices (if we knew for certain what those were).
All of these ‘we just don’t knows’ are what these
‘authentic’ spaces and reenactments tempt us to be able to answer. Chrisman
insists she can discover the truth of Victorian experience by wearing a corset
and typing by oil lamp. Similarly, one of the many debates about the
construction of the Globe has to do with the placement of the onstage pillars. During
an interview I conducted, an actor at the Globe half-jokingly noted that he was
pretty sure the pillars were in the wrong place: when I pressed him, he said
more seriously that they just felt wrong,
they didn’t complement his impulses as an actor. In his writings about the
discovery of the Rose Playhouse, Sir Ian McKellan somewhat smugly points out
that many features make perfect sense to an actor, like an apparent rake in the
floor, or the fact that the stage faces the sun— but what about those that
don’t, like the truly atrocious sightlines from the side galleries?
But as Slate’s really nice article puts it, ‘The “past” was not made up
only of things. Like our own world, it was a web of social ties. These social
ties extended into every corner of people’s lives, influencing the way people
treated each other in intimate relationships; the way disease was passed and
treated; the possibilities open to women, minorities, and the poor; the whirl
of expectations, traditions, language, and community that made up everyday
lives. Material objects like corsets or kerosene lamps were part of this
complex web, but only a part.’ Wearing Victorian clothes and using Victorian
furniture does not magically grant you insight into the era itself; to judge by
Chrisman, it may well distract you from more critical, complex forms of
intellectual engagement-- including questioning how something as broad as the Victorian era (or the Jacobean, or the Elizabethan) could possibly be narrowed down to a single set of opinions and aesthetics.
Similarly, we are not an early modern audience. Thinking
that we can watch a scene performed in a reconstructed space and use our
opinions and impulses to recreate the way things were really done is to forget
the most essential pieces of the puzzle: the culture, the society, the other
plays we’d seen that week or in our lifetime, the things we’d read that
morning, the gossip around town. The most conspicuous example in the case of early modern performance practice is the boy player: we will always find men playing women to be more unusual than an Elizabethan or Jacobean would have, and even then, we can't really know how realistic or artificial they considered those performances to be.
It’s incredibly tempting to think that the right
architecture or the right outfit can offer a shortcut to understanding a time
period or a culture that we love. I am a huge fan of living history, and
artifacts and reconstructions have immense value. But it’s dangerous (to good
history, anyway) to forget that in many essential ways, we are not doing or seeing
what Victorians and Elizabethans and Jacobeans did and saw.
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