Richard II
by
William Shakespeare
Through
The Looking Glass
Order, order! Along
to the Arcola Theatre cum House of Commons for this updating of Richard II for
the Netflix, boxed set generation directed by Jack Gamble and Quentin Beroud.
It's
a pared down version, structured around 24 hour BBC-style breaking news (video design: Sofi Berenger), shoehorned into a US-type political thriller
format along the lines of the West Wing or House of Cards (US or UK).
After
the death of a political heavyweight, King Richard (Tim Delap) is called on to arbitrate
between his two cousins, Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk (David Acton), and Harriet Bolingbroke (Hermione Gulliford) - the latter a blonde female
power player, all sharp suits and stilleto heels. Richard fails to grasp the
threat posed by this family rift and leaves himself open to rebellion and a
coup.
It's
a pity the reimagining remains so reliant on pre-existing formats. For looking more closely at the parliamentary set
up, the bars, the debates and question times, the division bell and so on
might have reaped benefits for the logic of the tale.
As
it is, we have to accept a parallel universe where cousins like Cameron and
Johnson (yes, they really are cousins!) do not simply jibe with words and where murder
is not out of place. Where (the closest to a death-in-office we could think of) the death of a party ;leader like John Smith is definitely
not from natural causes.
The
play starts promisingly with Shakespeare's own lines talking of receipts echoing the expenses' crisis and
disenchantment over a country "leased out", giving reasons why the nation
might be ripe for change.
But
it's the characters who are more credible than a shaky political
drama format and this unbalances the play. Nevertheless, Hermione Gulliford is
a striking tactical female Harri Bolingbroke.
Her
ascent up the greasy pole gives the play its trajectory and allows also a
tantalising glimpse of Richard's wife Isabel (Natasha Bain) as a politician
trying to galvanise her born-into-the-role husband.
Yet
the change of sex for Bolingbroke also sets up scenarios which feel, to us, like missed
opportunities.
When
Richard is dislodged by nefarious means, we were waiting for a glimpse of
vulnerability from Harri. As a woman in a violent man's world, a politician who
fears the situation has run away from her and the possibility striking her she
might be being used and could be sacrificed.
But
this never materialised and the transfer of power for Harri appears a seamless
upward trajectory regardless of gender.
Ignore
the plot holes, concentrate on character,and you can appreciate the
disciplined, careful performances, including those of Tim Delap's Richard II and Hayden Wood's Bagot, even if they feel sometimes out of context.
This looking glass
world is just a little too cracked and undetailed to hold our attention as a
story. Still characters do have resonance, so in the end an amber light.
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