23 September 2025
'Measure for Measure' - which we saw at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon last Saturday - has never been one of my favourite Shakespeare plays, but I seem to have been gradually warming to it. I think I had seen it three times before and my comments here on two previous RSC productions (in January 2012 and July 2019) suggest my growing understanding and appreciation of the play. Emily Burns' new RSC production is the best of the lot. Not only does it give the play a contemporary setting (with a great set by Frankie Bradshaw), the production made me realise what a modern play it is - despite having been written around 1603. It has a different feel to most Shakespeare plays: the language is less poetic, more realistic, and it consists mainly of a series of claustrophobic two-hander scenes. Watching it on Saturday we could almost have been at the National Theatre or the Royal Court at the premiere of a new play about power, misogyny and corruption. 'Measure for Measure' is a dark tale but this version made the narrative clearer than I remembered it, allowing you to focus on the parallels between the behaviour of Angelo and the Duke and their modern equivalents. (The play starts with a montage of recent news footage featuring Bill Clinton, Boris Johnson, Matt Hancock et al). The play was cleaner and clearer for its very sparing (and effective) use of music. And the introduction of hand-held video cameras projecting live-feeds onto two giant screens heightened the climax of the final scene by showing us close-ups of the main characters' reactions. The principals - Adam James as the Duke, Tom Mothersdale as Angelo and Isis Hainsworth as Isabella - were all excellent. It was a really impressive production.
No comments:
Post a Comment