Newsnight Review discussed Daniela Nardini in Camille at the Lyric Hammersmith in London.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
MARK LAWSON:
Paul, do they make the case for doing it
again?
PAUL MORLEY:
No. Did nobody see Moulin Rouge? It's a
letdown. The Parker thing comes to mind
if you are going to make intelligent things
these days you have to do something with
form that doesn't make us think we are
seeing a slightly amateur production. The
audience is beginning to twitch. The actors
are looking and we know that there are
spaces that are appearing and we know she
is going to die. In the end we are all
relieved to get the heck out of there, as
were the people on the stage.
LAWSON:
It is set in a specific world, does it have
anything still to say about men and
women?
JEANETTE WINTERSON:
It should, but it doesn't. It is brave but it is
a poetic script. You cannot bring across
any power when you miscast it. It is not
Daniela Nardini's fault she cannot play it
on stage. You need an actress of
tremendous power to come on and
captivate us. It's a big role and she can't do
it.
MORLEY:
It is a problem because it is set up for a few
minutes before she arrives.
WINTERSON:
She comes on and she cannot carry it off. It
is not because she is too big and beefy and
she is meant to be dying.
LAWSON:
I thought I would raise that point. Is it right
that people pay so much attention to the
physical capabilities of actors?
WINTERSON:
No, in opera you are convinced by the
singer and by the role. A different actress
could have made it happen for us, but all
the time we are thinking this is an
embarrassment
EKOW ESHUN:
The problem is there is no revelation in it.
It starts with the main characters shouting at
each other across the stage and it builds up
to a hysterical pitch. There is no subtlety in
it. It had stripped back. In doing so he
hasn't found anything new to say so it is
empty at the core.
LAWSON:
I had the most horrible feeling of feeling
sorry for the actors but also for the theatre,
because there is a real problem that you
have the great barn-life theatres run by
local councils and how do you get people
in, put a TV star in a familiar classic which
is all you can do and it doesn't work.
WINTERSON:
It's a huge space to fill up. It's not the
television camera and she fluffs her lines.
MORLEY:
It is a form of intellectual pantomime and
you get the TV star to lift it. I was almost
going to get up and sing It's a Little Bit
Funny. Everybody was miscast, give or
take the rather amusing lady but it seemed
out of beat. The production and direction.
In the end we were all happy to go home.