![]() |
| The forest of flying chairs www.thestage.co.uk |
A couple of weeks ago I saw Polly Findlay’s interpretation
of As You Like It at the National. A
high-impact show that did have the audience wow-ing
at a dramatic scene change involving a mechanical office being dragged
skywards, turning chairs into an eerie and textured Forest of Arden, but nevertheless a disappointing recraft of such an
enjoyable play. Both I and the original script sat hand in hand, both losing
our plots together as we witnessed a sad example of not-so-big actors being outshined
by a budget seriously out of their depth. Had Shakespeare not been…well…Shakespeare it could even be said that
the director had been given an embarrassing script and a lot of time to think
of something to cover up the shamefulness of the naked production.
But this isn’t an embarrassing script or a naked
production. Back in the day of the playwright, Shakespeare was enjoyed in a
smelly pit where lines had to be shouted from the side of the stage because
actors had only rehearsed once or twice before appearing in front of the live
audience. He still gained an enormous crowd, and still made it to being
unquestionably the greatest English playwright of all time. For years people have enjoyed Shakespeare’s plays, and
the Globe theatre still is an incredibly popular go-to theatre for London
locals and tourists alike who want to experience Shakespeare as close to the
original as we can get. So why do modernist directors like Polly Findlay feel
the need to rely so heavily on special effects in order to drag in audiences
and keep us entertained?
Perhaps the director thought the punchy rock music and
red lights during the fight scene of As
You Like It might contradict the stigma that Shakespeare is boring. In
Elizabethan times, audiences would have been attracted to this play since transvestism
was against the law, so cross-dressing was seen as shocking and rebellious. We
all know this isn’t the case now, so maybe an exciting set change has to do the
job that a man dressed as a woman dressed as a man would have done back in Shakespeare’s
day. Or maybe the British public is too lazy to listen properly when they go to
the theatre, so a complex Shakespearian script is simply too difficult to understand
if we don’t have such visual aids as a shower of post-it notes as Orlando
instructs ‘Hang there, my verse, in witness of my love.’
![]() |
| Michelle Terry and Simon Harrison in As You Like It at Shakespeare's Globe, 2015 www.thestage.co.uk |
Despite this consideration, it still seems like there’s a
bit of an elephant in the room with modernist Shakespeare. It’s great to re-set
and re-costume everyone into modern-day dress, but by putting Shakespeare into
a contemporary context aren’t we forgetting that the original script simply doesn’t
make sense in the society of today? In As
You Like It, Rosalind disguises herself as the male ‘Ganymede’, appearing on
the line ‘I could find it in my heart to disgrace my man’s apparel and to cry
like a woman’, but said ‘man’s apparel’ in the National’s production was just skinny
jeans and a hoodie. Admittedly androgynous, but we can’t itemise a pair of jeans
and a jacket as ‘man’s apparel’. Artistic license leads me to believe that as
an audience member I should stop worrying about this and start enjoying the
show, but the critical niggle forever whirring in the back of my mind can’t
help commenting irritatingly on everything I see on stage.
Despite my ability to be a
great bore and rant about why modernised Shakespeare just doesn’t work for me,
I still have to say I did enjoy As You
Like It. I mentioned the audience wow-ing
at the dramatic scene change – perhaps I should make it clear that I wasn’t
pretentiously sitting and tutting at this when I was at the show, looking down
on the peasants who don’t understand the true meaning of Shakespeare. No,
although I can be a bit of a bore I do still relish in high-budget shows that
keep me excited with flashy lights and flying chairs. It’s just a shame that
directors feel they’ve got to employ all these techniques to remind us Brits
that Shakespeare really is worth
going to see.


Romeo + Juliet is good tho ? ? .. . X x
ReplyDeleteOmg how did u even comment on this LOL and ur uncultured :p
Delete