Thursday, April 16, 2009

Play review: The Tempest RSC touring production

A key benefit of having a friend who works in the theatre business is that it is very handy for getting word of and to see great shows. Mucho ta!

Four of us went to see the current RSC touring production of The Tempest at Nottingham's Theatre Royal (rest of this week and then at Sheffield - go see it if you can get a ticket!)

This version of The Tempest produced in association with South Africa's Baxter Theatre Centre is a visual spectacle and is also aurally incredible. Puppets, music, masks, singing: it was a sensual treat.

I confess that it is not a play that I know well - Bloody Peter Greenaway's Prospero's Books didn't help warm me to the text, although the elegant ending to Neil Gaiman's Sandman books* thankfully did. But this production certainly made me want to read the play proper.

Sher as Prospero is brilliant - as you would expect an actor of his calibre to be - but his equivalent John Kani as Caliban (and perhaps even more so Kani's son Atandwa as Ariel) were astonishing. A sumptuous feast full of verve and delight, real magic and spectacle. A complete privilege to experience.


* I've done my annual re-read of The Sandman this weekend -- and it felt rather apt to end on 'The Tempest', issue 75 at the end of the finale volume 'The Wake' just as we went to see this RSC production. Neil Gaiman and all your compadres: I salute your brilliance.

2 comments:

Jane Henry said...

Ooh, I hope it comes to London. I think the Tempest is a bit of an odd one actually, not very transparent at all. But I love Ariel,and the brave new world bit. Interestingly my lot were given this in Animated Shakespeare form, and the second one aged 4 absolutely loved it. I think she liked the magic or something.
Neil Gaiman is a genius of course. I read a lot of Sandman stuff but never finished the series. Bad gap in my fantasy knowledge that! Am just catching up with his books. I so wanted to publish him when I was at Scholastic, but couldn't get anyone to take me seriously about him and lacked the necessary confidence to go chasing him. Sigh...

Jane Henry said...

Ooh, I hope it comes to London. I think the Tempest is a bit of an odd one actually, not very transparent at all. But I love Ariel,and the brave new world bit. Interestingly my lot were given this in Animated Shakespeare form, and the second one aged 4 absolutely loved it. I think she liked the magic or something.
Neil Gaiman is a genius of course. I read a lot of Sandman stuff but never finished the series. Bad gap in my fantasy knowledge that! Am just catching up with his books. I so wanted to publish him when I was at Scholastic, but couldn't get anyone to take me seriously about him and lacked the necessary confidence to go chasing him. Sigh...