Much Ado about Nothing – A Fan’s Review

Much Ado Sign BlackAs you may already know, the whole purpose of the London saga was to see David Tennant in Much Ado about Nothing. I talked about the astonishing karma I experienced there but didn’t say much about the play itself.  Here is the review.

I’ll admit right off that I’m not a Shakespearean expert.  I didn’t study him in school, have not seen all his plays and cannot tell which quarto should have been included or not.  The intrinsic discovery of the Bard didn’t occur until my late 30s when my mind clicked with both the language and the plots and I acquired a better appreciation through live performance rather than dry text.  I vaguely remember the film version with Kenneth Branaugh so there’s no comparison being made in this review.

The action was set in 1980’s Gibraltar with Don Pedro (and his men stationed there including Benedick (David Tennant).  Beatrice (Catherine Tate) was the niece of Governor Don Leonato (Jonathon Coy).  The production solved the issue of how to get uber famous Tennant on the stage by having him drive on honking a golf cart festooned in Union Jacks.  The comedy was slapstick and wrung for the most laughs it could get including a fancy dress disco ball with Tennant dressed in black fishnet stockings and a mini skirt, and swinging Tate in the air from a harness. It also got surprisingly raunchy with a stag party blow up doll and stand up sex in an alley.

For those who don’t know Much Ado: Beatrice and Benedick, confirmed cynical bachelors, are duped into believing they are in love with each other.  Their story runs parallel to that of Claudio and Hero who have a more traditional courtship.  This is against the backdrop of political intrigue between brothers Don Pedro and Don Leonato.

Tennant was fantastically cynical, funny and smitten with Beatrice.  He was clearly at home with Shakespeare and during the scene where he’s tricked into thinking Beatrice was in love with him, he played directly to the audience for all it was worth.  There clearly were Doctor Who (Tennant played the 10 Doctor, aka the Lonely God) fans during the evening performance; when Tennant uttered the line “I’ll be like a god!”  the audience laughed and groaned.  He played that for all it was worth, breaking character for a moment, “Not that god!”   His scene contained much slapstick and tomfoolery but he smoothly pulled it off with panache, leaving the audience gasping with laughter.  Too bad his duping scene preceded Tate’s because by the time she’s dangling from the ceiling in a painter’s harness, it just wasn’t as funny.  Ironic for a woman whose profession is comedic acting.

david tennat and catherine tateTate was very humorous in her funny scenes but somehow missed the mark when poignancy and wistfulness were required.  She mostly appeared distant and sarcastic until she heard that Benedick was in love with her.  Tate also had difficulty during the scene where they acknowledged their love and she suddenly ordered Benedick to “Kill Claudio!”  This scene required an almost instant transitional moment between hilarity and deadly seriousness which Tate didn’t hit consistently during the two performances I saw.  That’s not to say Tate didn’t hold her own; it’s that it was apparent to me she was not the same acting caliber as Tennant.  I can honestly say this without bias.  Had Tennant turned in less than a stellar performance, I certainly would point it out.  I believe in saying the emperor has no clothes, if necessary, even about my crushes.

The rest of the cast was quite good with Claudio and Hero (newcomers Tom Bateman and Sarah Macrae).  Don John (Elliot Levey) was more of a cardboard villain than a flawed individual which might have been a mistake in characterization.  The cast breakout was Dogberry (John Ramm) played as a very funny bumbling Rambo type.

Overall, it was an excellent but flawed production staged by Josie Rourke. Since I can’t recall Branaugh’s version, I can’t say whether it favorably compared.  However, I can say that this adaption worked for me.  I enjoyed it and found the trip worth it.

 

13 thoughts on “Much Ado about Nothing – A Fan’s Review

  1. Great review! Sounds like a really fun play to see and sounds like you really enjoyed it too. 🙂

    Can’t believe I’m this slow, but it was only as I reached the end of your review that I remembered that Catherine Tate and David Tennant actually acted together on Dr. Who. She was his companion for a bit, DUH! And I watched every single episode! Yet nothing. Man, that’s ridiculous. …I’ll get my coat!

    • The play did make the trip trauma really worth it, although I would have survived had I missed it.

      LOL! Well, I see that season made a real impact on you! 😀

  2. GUH! Kenneth Branagh as Benedick … oh yeah! I love that crumpled Welsh plumber (I’m sure that’s what he’d be if he was not an actor) when he does Shakespeare. I luuuuuuurve Henry IV most of all but probably because it was the one Shakesy play in school I did understand.
    But this blog isn’t about coulda-been Welsh plumbers is it?

    Mmmm, David Tennant … it’s starting to be a “is he a lark or is he a nightingale?” kind of thing with me now (yes, I know you are shocked that I might be teetering) and I think I’m leaning a wee bit towards … nightingale!

    (and if I could find a way to talk about Rufus Sewell as Petruchio my morning would be off to a fabulous start … oh, I just did!)

  3. “Crumpled Welsh plumber”! 😀
    A pity Beatrice wasn’t up to snuff – it’s a great part. (I played Claudio when a fat thirteen. Least said; what a dumb role).

    Still can’t believe you snaffled those seats to THREE plays!!!

  4. Okay Judi girl,

    I never get the freebies or giveaways. Maybe I’m not putting myself out there in the right light. I agree with Fitzg. You’re going to have to give a master’s class on how to make people with tickets, dinner table reservations, or TORN cross country Hobbit road trips to plan take pity on we poor besotted RA fans and entertain us, feed us, and come to our town. For the last one, I typed whiningly that I live in “Normal”–seriously–to see if they would like that hook. We’ll see if TORN bites. Ha!

    I loved reading your London journey travelogues–both your trying to get there and then your enjoying yourself while your there! I’m so glad you were able to see DT as you wished. I hope it makes everything you had to go through worthwhile.

    Would I go to such lengths to see RA in The Rovers in London–or whatever play he chooses to do? Absolutely! But you’ll have to give me some great sedation for me to tolerate my being terrified of flying these days. So, I’ll need some seat mates to keep me company on the long flight and I elect you and Callie to go along with me. Ha!

    Cheers! Grati ;->

    • It was *karma* I’m telling you! I never win freebies or lotteries or anything. Just seemed my time I supposed and a good thing too. I love flying. The way I see it, I have a better chance being in a car wreck than a plan crash. In the meantime, life is just too short to miss out traveling. I’d be happy to be your seatmate. What fun! 😀

  5. I’m always pleased when I hear about a production pushing the limits of taste — the original Shakespeare comedy productions were apparently really bawdy and in questionable taste. That’s one reason people of all social groups loved them.

    • Now that you mention it, that’s very true. I wondered because there were children during the matinee. They certainly got an education.

  6. Pingback: Sexy Saturday: Real Men, 40 and Over Actors Who are Sexy and Bankable, March 09, 2013 Gratiana Lovelace (Post #376) | Something About Love (A)

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