Around The World In 80 Days
By
Laura Eason
Before
the internet put a girdle round the world in nano-seconds, TLT and her own
Passepartout automobile recalls David Niven
and Shirley MacLaine on the telly floating in the basket of a hot
air balloon in the 1956 movie.
It
seems curious and remains unanswered in any way by this play, why a Frenchman
Jules Verne would write a book
about English gent Phileas Fogg with a British Empire Bank of England featuring
majorly in the background. However now American playwright Laura Eason has adapted Verne's 1873 episodic adventure
story Around The World In 80 Days
into a tongue-in-cheek play directed by Lucy Bailey.
Phileas
Fogg (a suitably phlegmatic Robert Portal), a London gentleman of mysterious
independent means who lives a life of
mathematical precision attended by recently recruited French valet Jean
Passepartout (an engaging Simon Gregor), accepts a £20,000 bet from his Reform
Club whist pals.
Namely
that he can travel the world in 80 days by rail and steamer clutching his copy
of Bradshaw's Guide - the world tending
to mean the dominions of the then British Empire apart from the breakaway USA
But
with any good book, it turns out what sounds most topical is in the original Jules
Verne's novel : the Bank of England robbery, the gas left burning, the
incompetence of Inspector Fix (Tony Gardner playing it with a touch of One Man
Two Governors) chasing the wrong man with his warrant.
While
adventures rather than deep characterisation dominate the book, it remains a
stonking story harnessing 19th century fascination with travel, Empire and
exploration with a touch of the later Sherlock Holmes
and an attempted nemesis in Fix who believes Fogg to be a gentleman thief.
This
cheery pantomine-like version held the attention of the youngsters in the
audience. A detailed set by Anna Fleischle adapts well enough to above ship and
round-the-world locations while below deck the show starts with live piano
playing. The rest of the eight strong
cast including Liz Sutherland and Eben Figueiredo inhabit a range of roles with
a breezy comic competence.
Enjoyable
but not perfect. The saloon style piano player features in the first few
minutes but never appears again. and with the feel of a children's show, it did
make TLT and her companion wonder whether the play could work just as well with
an unadorned stage while keeping the ingenious props.
The
grumpy old men in the Reform Club, an elephant ride led by Lena Kaur as the
pachyderm's keeper, a Hong Kong opium
den and a turn by Tim Steed as an American colonel stick in the mind. But, the
first act particularly sometimes felt less than varied in staging and pace once
the initial character traits of the lead characters were established.
Still
the testosterone-fuelled events are suitably softened with the rescue of widow
Mrs Aouda (a graceful Shanyana Rafaat)
from the funeral pyre and Gregor's Passepartout enlivens proceedings in the
second act when the actors break out of the fourth wall.
So
it's another 80 days to add to the canon: A 1946 Orson Welles/Cole Porter flop (:o!!!) musical;
a foxy 1972 Australian animation series; a 1984 mini series with Piers Brosnan and then Jackie Chan and Steve Coogan in a very loose adaptation. All
preceded by a 1919 silent German film Die Reise um die Erde in 80 Tagen.
This skittish adaptation has plenty of playfulness, even explaining with the lightest of touches the lack of a hot air balloon. Yet it felt as if it could have explored more the impetus behind the book, threading in its literary allusions and social background. All this may have lent more variety to its staging to match the energy of the acting ensemble. An amber light.
This skittish adaptation has plenty of playfulness, even explaining with the lightest of touches the lack of a hot air balloon. Yet it felt as if it could have explored more the impetus behind the book, threading in its literary allusions and social background. All this may have lent more variety to its staging to match the energy of the acting ensemble. An amber light.