A Man for All Seasons | |
| A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS, THINGS WE DO FOR LOVE, KIND HEARTS & CORONETS (Pitlochry Festival Theatre, in Rep until October 2005) | |
13 July 2005ARTHUR BROCKLEBANK extols the virtues of a visit to Pitlochry Festival Theatre.DRAMA HAS NEVER featured largely at Eden Court Theatre, although I have the impression that audiences for plays were increasing in numbers during the last year or two. With that theatre closed for refurbishment for the next eighteen months, perhaps more, it is certainly worth considering a trip down the A9 to Pitlochry Festival Theatre. I went down for two days, with a one-night stay, and saw the first three of the six plays to be presented this season. If you study the current brochure, and you're keen to see four plays at one visit, it is possible with a two-night stay. Ayckbourn knows only too well how to leaven the plot with some of the funniest situations you'll ever see from this authorIt is among the greatest of historical plays, portraying the plight of Sir Thomas More who resists Henry V's desire to dispense with a wife who cannot produce a male heir as a matter of political expediency. More's Christian principles and his deep sense of morality land him in hot water with the King, and it this drama which is played out with many of the great historical characters - The Duke of Norfolk, Cardinal Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell, Thomas Cranmer and others. Dougal Lee, an actor of outstanding talent, plays Sir Thomas More with uncanny sensitivity and fortitude, ranging from the joy of his family life, to his degradation an a cell, leading to his execution. Click here to download Arthur Brocklebank's interview with Dougal Lee in mp3 format. This production is adapted for the stage by Giles Croft. It is certainly a very clever and skilful adaptation, and it goes without saying that, as in the other plays, the acting is superb. The scene, unchanged throughout the play, is a dark one with a back-drop like a high wall with numerous panels opening at appropriate moments to reveal assorted characters referred to in the dialogue. In the film it was easy to change locations with cuts, but on stage this is brought about by electronic trolleys that rumble off and on carrying furniture for the next scene, and sometimes complete with the players. I enjoyed and appreciated the inventiveness of this for the first half hour or so, but after that I became slightly irritated with it. Perhaps I was waiting for one of the trolleys to go off its course and end up in the first row of the audience, or break down halfway to its allotted position. Neither happened. A fine play indeed laced with subtle and pointed humour, and, of course, cleverly acted, but not one that will remain in my database of plays which I would love see again and again. © Arthur Brocklebank, 2005
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