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Twelfth Night

Thu, 29 July 2010, 08:27 am
Gordon the Optom7 posts in thread

‘Twelfth Night’ an all time favourite comedy by William Shakespeare, is wonderfully directed by Roger Hodgman. Presented by Black Swan State Theatre Company at the Playhouse Theatre, 3 Pier Street, Perth. The performances commence nightly at 7.30 until 8th August.

    Just off the coast of Illyria, a boat sinks and young Viola (Amanda Woodhams) is washed ashore. In order to get work with the Duke Orsino (Kenneth Ransom), Viola disguises herself as a man and calls herself Cesario. Cesario’s first task is to flirt with the beautiful Olivia (Kirsty Hillhouse) on the Duke’s behalf!

    However the insipid, but enthusiastic, Sir Andrew Aguecheek (Ingle Knight) is desperate for Olivia’s love and so calls upon her uncle, Sir Toby Belch (Luke Hewitt) and his friend Fabian (Stuart Halusz) to assist him in his wooing. To complicate things even further, Olivia’s servant, Malvolio (Geoff Kelso) also fancies her.

    Viola believes that her twin brother Sebastian (Will O'Mahony) was drowned when the ship wrecked, but after a while he appears on the scene with his rescuer, Antonio (Kelton Pell). With both Viola and Sebastian being dressed in sailors’ outfits, everyone confuses the two.

     Unfortunately ‘cougar’ Olivia falls madly in love with Cesario – let us see you get out of that one Viola!

Steve Turner was Feste the Fool, in a delivery similar to Paul Livingston’s erudite Flacco, proved that he was far from stupid. Turner broke new ground by having to sing several short pieces in genres from Blues to Folk. Ash Gibson Greig’s music was at his its best.

There was great support from the supporting cast of Renee Hale, Brendan Hanson, Samantha Murray and Kazimir Sas who is proving to be a promising talent. How often are the minor parts forgotten or ignored by the director? Here they too became an important part of the storyline.

As an enthusiastic Melz has said, this really is an excellent contemporary version of an old favourite.  The dialogue is still Elizabethan, but the delivery very modern. With plays such as ‘The Importance of being Ernest’ we find ourselves saying ‘Oh not again’, ‘seen it a hundred times!’ well this production brings a brand new light and approach to ‘Twelfth Night’. With such a solid and much awarded cast of talent, I expected a lot and was still amazed at the performances. Think of the best version of ‘Twelfth Night’ that you have ever seen and this presentation doubles the enjoyment.

The laughs came every few seconds. The double entendres and metaphors that may have been missed in the past were clearly delivered and played to the full in this show. I had never realised how near to an R-rating the script is, thankfully a couple of dubious lines were not elucidated e.g. the lips and the whistle.

What an amazing director Roger Hodgman is, the lateral thinking, the cracking pace and the fun he creates is magnificent.

My immediate reaction on seeing the cross-cambered stage, with the floor sloping gently in various directions was why go to the bother and expense? But Christina Smith’s idea really did make for more excitement to the movement and flow of the various scenes taking place in the same area. The audience finds themselves in a cave looking out to sea, with the entire action taking place in the cave. The lighting (Jon Buswell) hues, patterns and precise illumination levels were spot-on.

Alicia Clements’ costumes were the best I have seen this year, some added to the fun, other gave beauty, each and every one giving a clear character portrayal of their wearers.

As Melz says, you don’t have to know or like Shakespeare to enjoy this. Was Melz over enthusiastic about this play? Probably not, thanks to a fabulous cast it really is hilarious.

Gordon the Optom

Thread (7 posts)

Gordon the OptomThu, 29 July 2010, 08:27 am

‘Twelfth Night’ an all time favourite comedy by William Shakespeare, is wonderfully directed by Roger Hodgman. Presented by Black Swan State Theatre Company at the Playhouse Theatre, 3 Pier Street, Perth. The performances commence nightly at 7.30 until 8th August.

    Just off the coast of Illyria, a boat sinks and young Viola (Amanda Woodhams) is washed ashore. In order to get work with the Duke Orsino (Kenneth Ransom), Viola disguises herself as a man and calls herself Cesario. Cesario’s first task is to flirt with the beautiful Olivia (Kirsty Hillhouse) on the Duke’s behalf!

    However the insipid, but enthusiastic, Sir Andrew Aguecheek (Ingle Knight) is desperate for Olivia’s love and so calls upon her uncle, Sir Toby Belch (Luke Hewitt) and his friend Fabian (Stuart Halusz) to assist him in his wooing. To complicate things even further, Olivia’s servant, Malvolio (Geoff Kelso) also fancies her.

    Viola believes that her twin brother Sebastian (Will O'Mahony) was drowned when the ship wrecked, but after a while he appears on the scene with his rescuer, Antonio (Kelton Pell). With both Viola and Sebastian being dressed in sailors’ outfits, everyone confuses the two.

     Unfortunately ‘cougar’ Olivia falls madly in love with Cesario – let us see you get out of that one Viola!

Steve Turner was Feste the Fool, in a delivery similar to Paul Livingston’s erudite Flacco, proved that he was far from stupid. Turner broke new ground by having to sing several short pieces in genres from Blues to Folk. Ash Gibson Greig’s music was at his its best.

There was great support from the supporting cast of Renee Hale, Brendan Hanson, Samantha Murray and Kazimir Sas who is proving to be a promising talent. How often are the minor parts forgotten or ignored by the director? Here they too became an important part of the storyline.

As an enthusiastic Melz has said, this really is an excellent contemporary version of an old favourite.  The dialogue is still Elizabethan, but the delivery very modern. With plays such as ‘The Importance of being Ernest’ we find ourselves saying ‘Oh not again’, ‘seen it a hundred times!’ well this production brings a brand new light and approach to ‘Twelfth Night’. With such a solid and much awarded cast of talent, I expected a lot and was still amazed at the performances. Think of the best version of ‘Twelfth Night’ that you have ever seen and this presentation doubles the enjoyment.

The laughs came every few seconds. The double entendres and metaphors that may have been missed in the past were clearly delivered and played to the full in this show. I had never realised how near to an R-rating the script is, thankfully a couple of dubious lines were not elucidated e.g. the lips and the whistle.

What an amazing director Roger Hodgman is, the lateral thinking, the cracking pace and the fun he creates is magnificent.

My immediate reaction on seeing the cross-cambered stage, with the floor sloping gently in various directions was why go to the bother and expense? But Christina Smith’s idea really did make for more excitement to the movement and flow of the various scenes taking place in the same area. The audience finds themselves in a cave looking out to sea, with the entire action taking place in the cave. The lighting (Jon Buswell) hues, patterns and precise illumination levels were spot-on.

Alicia Clements’ costumes were the best I have seen this year, some added to the fun, other gave beauty, each and every one giving a clear character portrayal of their wearers.

As Melz says, you don’t have to know or like Shakespeare to enjoy this. Was Melz over enthusiastic about this play? Probably not, thanks to a fabulous cast it really is hilarious.

Gordon the Optom

MelzThu, 29 July 2010, 03:42 pm

Twelfth Night

Thanks Gordon, love your review.  I still stand by what I wrote the other day, I could easily go and see this show again and again.  I come alive talking about it. :-)

Melz  :-)

Walter PlingeMon, 2 Aug 2010, 03:13 pm

It always surprises me how

It always surprises me how differing opinions can be about the same theatrical piece! Ali Talbut's review in The West Australian was nearly completely opposite to those of Mel and Gordon. That's theatre for you - one person's comedy is another's tragedy! Vive live theatre!
MelzMon, 2 Aug 2010, 03:50 pm

differering opinions

Yes, it is interesting isn't it.  Maybe Ali prefers the traditional method?  All I know is I loved it !

What day was Ali's review in The West... I wouldn't mind reading it.

 

Melz  :-)

Walter PlingeMon, 2 Aug 2010, 04:01 pm

was in last Friday:Twelfth

was in last Friday: Twelfth Night By William Shakespeare Black Swan State Theatre Company Playhouse Theatre Review: Ali Taulbut Twelfth Night is considered to be one of the best comedies ever written. The garden scene alone, in which the vain Malvolio is duped and humiliated by Sir Toby and co. is a masterclass in comedy writing. After Black Swan's excellent Much Ado About Nothing last season I arrived with an air of sunshine and optimism but ". . . hey, ho, the wind and the rain". On the isle of Illyria, twins Viola and Sebastian each believe the other to have perished in a shipwreck. Viola (Amanda Woodhams) opts to disguise herself as a eunuch and serve the local Duke Orsino (Kenneth Ransom) who is trying to woo Olivia, herself in mourning and playing host to her troublesome kinsman Sir Toby Belch. Designer Christina Smith offers a split performance space to represent the separation and the two houses of Orsino and Olivia. We glimpse the sea through the gap in the neutral palette of blue/grey walls and wooden flooring. What appears to be non-specific then suffers later from odd tokenistic references such as an esky, ugg boots and a bodyboard. This production, directed by Roger Hodgman, offered little in the way of originality of textual interpretation, was miscast in some crucial areas and failed to display any deeply heartfelt emotion. In Hodgman's program notes he says: "It has scenes of great romanticism, others of high and low comedy . . . and very dark aspects." No arguments, for they are the principal themes. He goes on to say: ". . . no one production can fully exploit all these elements . . ." I should have thought those were exactly the elements that every production must fully exploit in order to be doing its job. Hodgman makes a reasonable fist of the low comedy but much of the darkness - the cruelty at the heart of the comedy - is lacking. Kirsty Hillhouse overplayed Olivia with a touch too much "Mrs Robinson", getting cheap laughs at her cougar- style wooing of the youth Cesario, thereby losing the truth of her passion for Cesario/Sebastian. Woodhams, a young actor who elsewhere has shone, was here a little out of her depth with the language. Steve Turner's Feste was patchy - he sounded rather uncomfortable with the singing. Luke Hewitt was not stretched in producing his light and jovial Sir Toby. Where was the venom in his baiting of the pompous Malvolio? Ingle Knight's Sir Andrew Aguecheek was a worthy sidekick to Toby, a foppish gangle of misplaced limbs and self-delusion. A delightful Geoff Kelso took a scene or two to warm up but finally delivered a lovely Malvolio, capering in tennis shorts and knee-length yellow argyle socks and prompting two spontaneous bursts of applause. What raises the play from cheap farce to high art are the tensions and the paradoxes. It is a play with light and shade, yin and yang, love and loss at its centre. "What is love?" asks Feste. Nearly all of the characters are seeking it in some form. According to Plato's Symposium it is a quest to find your lost other half and that's always an appealing journey to witness. In spite of the directorial failings, the beguiling warmth of Shakespeare's work wins through. Twelfth Night runs until August 8.
crgwllmsMon, 2 Aug 2010, 04:53 pm

The West review

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/entertainment/a/-/entertainment/7674088/theatre-review-twelfth-night/ ~<8>-/====\---------
jeffhansenMon, 2 Aug 2010, 05:52 pm

edited out

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