Newsnight Review discussed Ibsen's The Lady From the Sea at the Almeida theatre.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review taken from the teletext subtitles that are generated live for Newsnight Review.)
KIRSTY WARK:
Vanessa Redgrave played this on
Broadway and at the Roundhouse. You
saw that. Did that colour your viewing of
watching her daughter play that?
BONNIE GREER:
Nope. Natasha Richardson has the timbre
of her mother. That's there. They're two
totally different approaches. Vanessa
Redgrave just creates this world, and you
push through it. Natasha Richardson is
always pulling back, trying to ground
herself in the reality of her home, her
family and at the same time being tugged
out to this dream state, this other reality
that she has. I was sitting there
looking at it, and I thought to myself,
there's only a handful of directors who
know how to make the stage work, and
Trevor Nunn is one of them. He always
delivers whether you like what he's doing
or not, it's beautiful. You can feel the heat
on the stage. You feel the poetic
dimension. He does something actually. He
allows the poetry of the play
to come through, and so does she.
KIRSTY WARK:
Unlike Shakespeare, this couldn't become a
contemporary play. It's so much set in its
time, its period.
TIM LOTT:
It feels creaky in that respect. I don't feel it
translates very well to now. It feels very
stagey. I quite enjoyed it, but I felt Natasha
Richardson, although I think she's a fine
actress, got a bit carried away with the mad
acting here and tried to ring too much out
of it. It was hysterical and over the top and
I found it unconvincing.
ADAM MARS-JONES:
There are problems, but they're not down
to her. The play is in two halves, the
ensemble bits and the heightened one,
which I agree don't work so well.
I thought it was like Checkov. It was like
Doll's House with a happy ending. It was
stuff with a leader. But the stuff of mutual
disappointments and the counterpoints of
failures were much, much like Checkov.
That was funny as it got sadder. The scene
with the botched proposal was one of the
most devastating themes I've seen. They're
there in the expressionist bits, but they
worked so much better there. How
devastating it was for her to realise what
her choices were. As she begins to explore
them, the man shrinks.
BONNIE GREER:
We can't talk about Ibsen, in this way. This is a great
play. I think what we've lost in our age is a
kind of poetic dimension. I think we're
losing how to go to the theatre and see a
poetic piece of work. We're very
television, journalistic oriented. Trevor
Nunn takes a big chance. He goes with the
feeling of the play. He has music in it, the
lighting.
ADAM MARS-JONES:
I felt the music was a mistake.
BONNIE GREER:
It was absolutely right because that is the
essence of the play.
ADAM MARS-JONES:
The music called attention to the
inconsistency of the play.
KIRSTY WARK:
You say it's a bit creaky, but what about
the evocation of the sea itself and the set? I
thought what did work was the angled disc
on which the set was set. It left a lot more
to the soundscape, but I thought it worked
much better.
TIM LOTT:
I thought it worked profoundly well. I
thought there was a fantastic sense of
atmosphere and you were right inside it. I
didn't feel that the sound worked either. I
thought the music was very distracting from
the play as a whole.
BONNIE GREER:
Beautiful play, go see it.