Suzanne Pleshette dies

Bob Newhart Suzanne Pleshette

By Ray Bennett

Suzanne Pleshette, who made her movie debut in “The Geisha Boy” with Jerry Lewis in 1958 and achieved lasting fame as the missus on “The Bob Newhart Show (1972-79, pictured), died Saturday night at home in Los Angeles. She was 70.

A major bonus of being an unapologetic childhood fan of Jerry Lewis was to be introduced via his films, at a formative age, to what in those days were inoffensively termed dames or broads: Shirley MacLaine and Dorothy Malone (“Artists and Models”), Lori Nelson (“Pardners”), Martha Hyer (“Delicate Delinquent”), Marilyn Maxwell and Connie Stevens (“Rock-a-Bye Baby”), Joan Blackman (“Visit to a Small Planet”), Stella Stevens (“The Nutty Professor”).

For a boy barely into his teens, the discovery of Suzanne Pleshette in “The Geisha Boy” was quite wonderful, and meeting her many years later in Los Angeles was to have your best instincts confirmed.

Pleshette in person was the uncensored version of the classy dame who appeared on the Johnny Carson show with a lascivious mind as scattered as her imagination and a wit as sharp as her shining eyes.

Here is the Los Angeles Times obituary.

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THEATRE REVIEW: Ben Woolf’s ‘Angry Young Man’

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By Ray Bennett

Four clean-cut young men in suits on a small stage — bare apart from two stools and two chairs — become many characters, men and women, including a doctor from Eastern Europe who is lost in London in Ben Woolf’s very entertaining short play “Angry Young Man.”

Named Yuri, the young surgeon lands at one of London’s less accessible airports, from where the taxi ride to the center leaves him penniless and without luggage. There is a job appointment awaiting him if he can survive without shelter in an unforgiving city, but soon unpleasant racists and pleasant liberals are giving him equal trouble.

He is not so much angry as bewildered as well-meaning do-gooders land him in just as much difficulty as ugly skinheads, and his introduction to Britain becomes one damned thing after another.

Woolf tells Yuri’s story in an engaging mix of narration and dialogue as the guileless medical man bounces from one dilemma to the next. It’s observant and funny stuff, but the reason it works so well is because of the quartet’s tightly choreographed movement and ability to don and doff exotic characters in a flash.

Hywel John, Gary Shelford, Hugh Skinner and Alex Waldmann each play Yuri at different times, and one of the slyest gags is the difference between the highfalutin English that he hears himself delivering and the bumbling speech he actually utters.

All sympathy is with the young man, however, as various English stereotypes are dispatched with incisive wit. The four actors switch accents, genders and social classes with wicked ease. They are all very good as Yuri in different moods, with John especially deft. Shelford makes a posh young liberal suitably swinish, while Waldmann convinces as his flirty girlfriend. Skinner adds to the laughs with feigned reluctance to portray various animals and inanimate objects.

Together, under playwright Woolf’s smart direction, they turn a moderately interesting hourlong tale into fine and amusing entertainment.

Venue: Trafalgar Studios, London, runs through Feb. 2; Cast: Hywel John, Gary Shelford, Hugh Skinner, Alex Waldmann; Playwright-director: Ben Woolf; Set designer: Will Holt; Lighting designer: Richard Howell; Presented by the MahWaff.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter; Photo by Geriant  Lewis.

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Stars turn out for new National Theatre season

Major Barbara 2

By Ray Bennett

Oscar winners Jeremy Irons, Vanessa Redgrave and Juliette Binoche plus Ralph Fiennes, Claire Higgins and Simon Russell Beale are among the stars to perform and the fabulous “War Horse” will return in the new season at London’s National Theater announced this morning.

Jeremy Irons will play British conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in a new play by Howard Brenton titled “Never So Good” to be directed by Howard Davies on the Lyttleton stage in March. Vanessa Redgrave will star in “The Year of Magical Thinking” by Joan Didion, based on her bestselling memoir. Directed by David Hare, the production transfers to the Lyttleton from New York at the end of April.

Juliette Binoche and Akram Jhan will co-direct and perform in the Lyttleton a new work designed by Anish Kapoor and co-produced by the National in September. Fiennes will take the title role in “Oedipus” by Sophocles in a new version by Frank McGuinness directed by Jonathan Kent on the Olivier stage in October.

Simon Russell Beale and Claire Higgins star with Hayley Atwell and Paul Ready in George Bernard Shaw’s “Major Barbara” (pictured). Nicholas Hytner’s production opens March 4 as part of the Travelex £10 Tickets program.

Other productions in the Travelex program, presented on the Olivier stage, are “Fram,” a new play by Tony Harrison about the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen, directed by Harrison and Bob Crowley and featuring Jasper Britton and Sian Thomas; Thomas Middleton’s Elizabethan play “The Revenger’s Tragedy,” directed by Melly Still with Rory Kinnear as Vindice; “Her Naked Skin,” a new play by Rebecca Lenkiewicz set during the suffragette era to be directed by Howard Davies; and a revival of “Every Good Boy Deserves Favour” by Tom Stoppard and Andre Previn.

“War Horse” which was sold out this winter in its opening run, will return to the Olivier in November. Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris direct Nick Stafford’s adaptation of the Michael Morpurgo novel.

Other highlights at the National this year will include a new play by Michael Frayn titled “Afterlife,” which examines the life of Max Reinhardt, Austrian impresario and founder of the Salzburg Festival; Simon Russell Beale (above) in Harold Pinter’s “A Slight Ache”; “The Pitmen Painters,” a new play by Lee Hall, writer of “Billy Elliot,” and a new production based on Dostoyevsky’s “The Idiot” starring Ben Whishaw, who is soon to be seen with Hayley Atwell in a new feature film based on Evelyn Waugh’s “Brideshead Revisited.”

 

 

 

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Oscar clues among the Golden Globes winners

'Atonement' Cliff

By Ray Bennett

No acting prizes for “Atonement” (pictured) in the Golden Globes but its richly deserved win as best film drama makes an Oscar nomination appear certain although last year’s Globes winner, “Babel,” lost to “The Departed” at the Academy Awards.

Last year’s Globes winner for best comedy or musical, “Dreamgirls,” didn’t get a look in at the Oscars but this year’s victor, “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” probably will.

Julian Schnabel’s Globes win as best director for the excellent “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” (which also won the foreign-language film prize) throws both the helming and best picture categories wide open at the Oscars.

Last year, Martin Scorsese won both prizes but fewer Academy voters will have seen Schnabel’s picture and that lets in Tim Burton with “Sweeney,” the Coen Bros. and “No Country For Old Men” (especially given their Globes screenwriting prize), Joe Wright with “Atonement” and possibly Justin Reitman and “Juno.”

This year’s dramatic acting winners Julie Christie for “Away From Her,” and Daniel Day Lewis for “There Will Be Blood” not only look good for Oscar noms but also become favorites given that last year’s honorees, Helen Mirren in “The Queen” and Forrest Whitaker in “The Last King of Scotland” went on to Academy Awards glory.

The comedy and musical acting prizes didn’t fare so well last year although Meryl Streep was Oscar-nominated for “The Devil Wears Prada.” But Sacha Baron Cohen’s performance in “Borat” was ignored. This year’s Globes winners in that category may fair better: Johnny Depp in “Sweeney Todd” and Marion Cotillard in “La Vie En Rose” have each won critical plaudits for their performances.

The Globes last year honored Eddie Murphy and Jennifer Hudson in the supporting categories and Hudson claimed an Oscar while Murphy stomped unhappily away from the proceedings. This year’s Globes winners, Cate Blanchett for “I’m Not There” and Javier Bardem (below) for “No Country For Old Men” both become best bets for Academy Awards.

Best original score awards this year were always going to see a tussle between two terrific works, the typewriter flourish of Dario Marianelli’s “Atonement” and Alberto Iglesias’ soaring music for “The Kite Runner.” Britain’s Marianelli copped the Golden Globe but last year’s choice, Alexander Desplat’s “The Painted Veil” lost out to Gustavo Santaolalla’s “Babel” at the Oscars, so the Spaniard remains in the hunt.

In the foreign-language film category, the Globes last year chose Clint Eastwood’s splendid Japanese language “Letters From Iwo Jima” over the German Oscar-winner “The Lives of Others.” The Eastwood film was ineligible for the category at the Oscars but copped a straight best film nomination anyway.

This year’s Globes foreign-language winner, “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” is also ineligible in the category for the Academy Awards, and so is “La Vie en Rose,” which leaves the door open to the brilliant Cannes winner, “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days.” It would be great if Jiri Menzel’s enthralling “I Served the King of England” and Nikita Mikhalkov’s Russian epic “12” would also get a look in, but it won’t happen.

 

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TV REVIEW: ‘Moving Wallpaper’ / ‘Echo Beach’

Moving Wallpaper : Echo Beach 2008

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Comedies set behind the scenes at television shows have met with varying success in the past, but Tony Jordan’s “Moving Wallpaper”/”Echo Beach” goes one step further by combining backstage antics with the finished product.

“Moving Wallpaper” is a sitcom about the people who are making a soap opera titled “Echo Beach.” The series are listed in U.K. schedules as two separate shows, but they clearly are of a piece, with setups from the first half-hour revealed in the second.

Jordan has impressive credentials as the creator of “Hustle” and co-creator of “Life on Mars,” both of which were made by this show’s producers Kudos Film & TV, which also is behind “Spooks.”

“Wallpaper” sees hotshot producer Jonathan Pope (Ben Miller) parachuted in 14 days ahead of launch to save a very somber soap opera set in a Cornish village on England’s southwest coast. One-liners fly thick and fast as Pope pays more attention to the design of his office than the show until it becomes apparent that it is on the verge of disaster.

Snapping to it, he changes the name of the soap to “Echo Beach” and orders it to be filled with glamorous people with a story line and production values designed to win British Soap Opera Awards.

He demands “wit, class and permanent erections” from sexy characters in a sultry landscape. Shot at Watergate Bay, the resulting visuals are gorgeous even if the beach parties appear to be happening in the cold.

Much will depend on whether audiences respond to the inside jokes and sly wit that spins off the sitcom into the soap opera. The two shows are very different in tone and look, but savvy viewers might well decide they make a handsome combination.

Airs: ITV1 9-10 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 10 2008; A Kudos Film & TV production in association with Red Planet Pictures; Executive producers: Tony Jordan, Jane Featherstone, Alison Jackson; Creator-teleplay: Tony Jordan; Production designer: Brian Sykes; Costume designer: Rosalind Ebbutt

ECHO BEACH

Cast: Jason Donovan; Martine McCutcheon; Hugo Speer; Ed Speleers; Christian Cooke; Hannah Lederer-Alton; Jonathan Readwin; Producer: Howard Burch; Director: Beryl Richards; Director of photography: John Daly; Composer: Steve Isles; Music supervisor: Ian Neil; Editor: Martin Sharpe.

MOVING WALLPAPER

Cast: Ben Miller; Lucy Liemann; Raquel Cassidy; Dave Lamb; Producer: Mark Hudson; Director: Dominic Brigstocke; Director of photography: Ian Liggett; Composer: Jonathan Whitehead; Editor: John Gow.

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THEATRE REVIEW: Catherine Storr’s ‘Marianne Dreams’

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Known for provocative productions, the Almeida Theatre has taken a typically adventurous approach to its first seasonal show for youngsters, “Marianne Dreams,” based on the 1958 novel by English writer Catherine Storr.

A fable about a 10-year-old girl’s reveries while she is in quarantine having treatment for a mysterious illness, it was made into a 1989 Working Title feature titled “Paperhouse,” starring Charlotte Burke, Glenne Headly and Gemma Jones.

For the stage production, Moira Buffini adapted the story into words, dance and pictures using colorful video projections and inventive lighting.

As a worried mother (Sarah Malin) and a fussy doctor (Jack James) oversee her care, young Marianne (Selina Chilton) is not happy that she must stay in bed all day, every day. But then she finds a pencil and encouraged by new tutor Miss Chesterfield (Siobhan Harrison), she begins to draw.

To Marianne’s astonishment, the things she draws take on a life of their own so that when she draws a house and forgets to put in stairs, the next time she draws them so she can go upstairs. There, she finds a young boy seemingly trapped against his will.

He turns out to be named Mark (Mark Arends), and he has polio. Moving in and out of her dreams, Marianne sets out to rescue the boy from his leg irons and find a cure for her own ailment, an adventure that causes them to flee sinister strangers toward the sanctuary of a lighthouse.

Will Tucker’s witty direction and choreography take Marianne into fantasies giddily but so spry is the writing and so persuasive the players – especially Chilton as the little girl – that they might not be dreams at all.

It’s another juvenile success for the grown-up Chilton, who played an artistic prodigy recently in “Lotte’s Journey” at London’s New End Theatre. Harrison also is very good as the governess while Lorna Heavey’s video art and projection design borders on the magical.

Venue: Almeida Theatre, runs through Jan. 26; Cast: Selina Chilton, Sarah Malin, Jack James, Siobhan Harrison, Mark Arends (Marianne in some performances: Sarah Boulton); Playwright: adapted for the stage by Moira Buffini from the novel by Catherine Storr; Director, choreographer: Will Tuckett; Lighting designer: Neil Austin; Music: Paul Englishby; Sound designer: Paul Groothius; Video art/projection designer: Lorna Heavey.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Cannes hit ‘El Violin’ bows at the Renoir

El Violin dvdBy Ray Bennett

The brilliant Mexican film “El Violin”, directed by Francisco Vargas, will have a brief release in London starting today at the Renoir Cinema, one of the Curzon group, near Russell Square.

It’s really worth the effort to see it on a large screen although the Cameo Media DVD will be released in the U.K. on March 23. The film’s star, Angel Tavira, was named best actor in the Un Certain Regard sidebar at the Festival de Cannes in 2006.

Read my review from The Hollywood Reporter

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Year in Review 2007: Film Acting

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By Ray Bennett

Brad Pitt (above) is my choice as best actor with Casey Affleck as best supporting actor for “The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford.” Laura Linney is best actress for “The Savages” with Romola Garai best supporting actress for “Atonement.”

Pitt deservedly won the best actor award at the Venice International Film Festival with a scorching performance combining his extraordinary charisma and poise with a psychopath’s hair-trigger taste for violence. Following his selfless ensemble work in “Babel,” Pitt has moved up to the level of movie stars who can really act and much will be revealed in his next choices.

Casey Affleck (below) is mesmerizing as the young man Robert Ford, who is wholly in thrall to the bandit star. The film’s director, Andrew Dominik, frames scenes that allow Ford’s adoration and envy to become increasingly haunting. Affleck applies shrewd intelligence to prevent the character from turning into simply a weasel.

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Laura Linney has been doing sterling work for years and she’s at her very best in Tamara Jenkins’ absorbing comedy drama “The Savages.” Linney combines with another outstanding actor, Philip Seymour Hoffman, to create indelible portraits of cultured siblings at a loss over dealing with their ailing father (Philip Bosco, also a fine performance).

Romola Garai has the toughest job in “Atonement” as an 18-year-old World War II nurse. She shows extraordinary poise in vital scenes, saying very little, as the director trusts her formidable expressive powers to convey meaning.

Best Actor in a Leading Role
Brad Pitt (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford)
Sergei Makovetsky (12)
Sasson Gabai (The Band’s Visit)
George Clooney (Michael Clayton)
Ivan Barnev (I Served the King of England)

Russian actor Makovetsky has the starry role in Nikita Mikhalkov’s brilliant trial drama “12” as the sole jury member to dissent from a rushed decision. He underplays to make the alcoholic idealist unforgettable among a dozen memorable performances. Sasson Gabai (left with Ronit Elkabetz) is superb as the strict Egyptian leader of a ceremonial police orchestra lost in Israel in “The Band’s Visit,” capturing the man’s grave dignity and the emotions churning inside. George Clooney’s performance as a jaded attorney who does the right thing in “Michael Clayton” is a master class in top-flight big-star movie acting. Using charm, artful phrasing, and silence, Clooney ranks with the best. Playing a slight but resourceful waiter in Jiri Menzel’s splendid Czech comedy “I Served the King of England,” Ivan Barnev has the physical grace of great comedians and expressive features that encourage sympathy despite some of the unsympathetic things he does.

Honorable mentions: Benicio del Toro (Things We Lost in the Fire), Christian Bale (Rescue Dawn), Philip Seymour Hoffman (The Savages), Mathieu Amalric (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), Matt Damon (The Bourne Ultimatum), Jake Gyllenhaal (Zodiac), Christopher Plummer (Man in the Chair), Adam Goldberg (2 Days in Paris)

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Best Actress in a Leading Role
Laura Linney (above with Philip Seymour Hoffman), The Savages
Anamaria Marinca (4 Months, 3 weeks and 2 Days)
Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth: The Golden Age)
Ronit Elkabetz (The Band’s Visit)
Kierston Wareing (It’s a Free World)

Anamaria Marinca, who won acclaim on the Channel Four miniseries “Sex Traffic,” shines in “4 Months, 3 weeks and 2 days,” a harrowing tale of abortion in totalitarian Romania. As a pregnant girl’s best friend, she is superb at displaying internal turmoil as she mirrors the horrors of the situation. Cate Blanchett is the best thing in “Elizabeth: The Golden Age,” using her extraordinary vocal agility to capture a ruler at the peak of her remarkable power. Ronit Eljabetz plays the sympathetic Israeli woman who helps out a troupe of lost Egyptian musicians in “The Band’s Visit,” and she gives her wisdom and grace with a sense of no little regret. Kierston Wareing is Ken Loach’s latest acting discovery and she gives a winning performance as a brash and misguided young woman caught up in the exploitation of immigrants in the U.K. in Loach’s “It’s a Free World.”

Honorable mentions: Marian Alvarez (The Best of Me / Lo mejor de mi), Ellen Page (Juno), Julie Christie (Away From Her), Galina Vishnevskaya (Alexandra), Marianne Faithfull (Irina Palm), Guylaine Tremblay (Summit Circle / Contre toute esperance), Julie Delpy (2 Days in Paris)

Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Casey Affleck (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford)
Steve Buscemi (Paris je t’aime)
Tom Wilkinson (Michael Clayton)
Philip Bosco (The Savages)
Sergei Garmash (12)

Honorable mentions: Saleh Bakri (The Band’s Visit), Javier Bardem (No Country For Old Men), Josh Brolin (No Country For Old Men), Steve Zahn (Rescue Dawn), Sam Rockwell (The Assassination of Jesse James), Oldrich Kaiser (I Served the King of England), Philip Seymour Hoffman (Charlie Wilson’s War), Vlad Ivanov (4 Months, 3 weeks and 2 days)

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Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Romola Garai (above, Atonement)
Cate Blanchett (I’m Not There)
Marisa Tomei (Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead)
Noemie Kocher (1 Journee)
Laura Vasiliu (4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days)

Honorable mentions: Allison Janney (Juno), Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton), Emmanuelle Seigner (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), Juliet Ellis (It’s a Free World).

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Year in Review 2007: My Top 10 picks

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By Ray Bennett

Top 10
1. The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
2. The Band’s Visit
3. I Served the King of England
4. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
5. Atonement
6. Michael Clayton
7. The Bourne Ultimatum
8. The Savages
9. 4 Months, 3 weeks and 2 Days
10. Zodiac

“The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford” is easily my choice as best film of the year with Andrew Dominik best director. It is an epic Western, elegant, detailed and profound, with an evocative production design by Patricia Norris, beautiful images by cinematographer Roger Deakins and expert editing by Curtiss Clayton and Dylan Tichenor. Dominik’s screenplay, adapted from a novel by Ron Hansen, gives a fine cast topped by Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck (pictured) plenty to work with.

My Top 10 list above for The Hollywood Reporter was restricted to films released in the United States. Otherwise Nikita Mikhalkov’s wonderful Russian remake of “Twelve Angry Men,” titled simply “12,” would be in there.

Other non-English language films I liked very much this year include Spanish director Jose Luis Guerin’s lyrical “In the City of Sylvia,” Marc Forster’s moving Afghan tale “The Kite Runner,” Samuel Benchetrit’s nutty French comedy “I Always Wanted to be a Gangster,” Russian director Alexandre Sokourov’s somber war story “Alexandra,” Nae Caranfil’s enthralling Romanian period epic about filmmaking, “The Rest is Silence,” Austrian director Stefan Ruzowitzky’s offbeat concentration camp tale “The Counterfeiters,” and German/Turkish director Fatih Akin’s story of ethnic strife, “The Edge of Heaven.”

English-language movies close to the Top 10 include Julie Delpy’s smart comedy “2 Days in Paris,” Jason Bateman’s hugely appealing “Juno,” Werner Herzog’s riveting POW picture “Rescue Dawn,” and Wong Kar-Wai’s first English-language film, the romantic “My Blueberry Nights.”

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Best director:
Andrew Dominik (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, pictured above)
Elan Kolirin (The Band’s Visit)
Jiri Menzel (I Served the King of England)
Joe Wright (Atonement)
Nikita Mikhalkov (12)
Honourable mentions: Jason Bateman (Juno), David Fincher (Zodiac), Paul Greengrass (The Bourne Ultimatum), Jose Luis Guerin (In the City of Sylvia), Tamara Jenkins (The Savages), Cristian Mungiu (4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days), Julian Schnabel (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), Alexandre Sokourov (Alexandra).

Disappointments:
“No Country For Old Men” because the Coen Bros. refused to accept that they’d made a thriller, and only a thriller.
“There Will Be Blood” for being crazily operatic.
“American Gangster” for looking nothing like a Ridley Scott film.
“Ratatouille” because everyone said it was a treat but it wasn’t half as funny or interesting as “Bee Movie”

Dire:
“Knocked Up,” “The Darjeeling Limited,” “Lust, Caution,” “Into the Wild,” “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story.”

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ at the National

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Simon Russell Beale and Zoe Wanamaker (pictured) breathe new life into the roles of belated lovers Benedick and Beatrice in Nicholas Hytner’s warmly enjoyable production of “Much Ado About Nothing” at London’s National Theatre.

Clearly not youngsters, Beale and Wanamaker find the irony and humor in a couple that once shared something like love but lost it along the way. Encouraged by mischievous friends and family to believe that each is smitten with the other, they convey their characters’ loneliness and misgivings about contemplating happiness.

Their love story is a subplot in another Shakespeare play dealing with sexual jealousy spurred by envy and hunger for power. But where “Othello” is dark and pessimistic, “Much Ado” takes a happier path.

The “nothing” of the title derives from a word meaning “misperceptions,” and that’s what the “much ado” is about, with hotheaded Claudio (Daniel Hawksford) persuaded that his betrothed, the angelic Hero (Susannah Fielding), has misbehaved ahead of their wedding day.

This causes much grief between their respective fathers, Don Pedro, the Prince of Aragon, (Julian Wadham) and Leonato (Oliver Ford Davies), while the prince’s bastard brother Don John (Andrew Woodall) conspires to ruin the match.Simon Russell Beale Much Ado x300

The set is made up of wooden beams of the kind to be found in a sauna bath, but it rotates serviceably to create the Sicilian setting of Leonato’s extended family. Hytner uses it to comic effect as Benedick and Beatrice eavesdrop on the conversations that lead them back to romance.

Beale (right) is hilarious as a man who has accepted bachelorhood with some regret but who now rediscovers the possibilities of a life with a partner. Ducking behind beams too narrow to hide his girth and at one point diving fearlessly into a pool to avoid being found makes his physical comedy as rich as the wordplay.

Beale finds new ways to declaim familiar sentences to mine the querulous joy Benedick experiences as passion is renewed. Wanamaker matches him to create a truly grown-up love affair.

Hawksford’s Claudio and Woodall’s Don John add bite to the proceedings, and Davies makes the dismayed father of the bride deeply moving. Mark Addy gives the nitwit patrolman Dogberry added dimension, while Oscar-winning composer Rachel Portman drapes the production in her elegant score.

Venue: National Theatre, runs through March 29; Cast: Simon Russell Beale; Zoe Wanamaker; Mark Addy; Oliver Ford Davies; Julian Wadham; Andrew Woodall; Daniel Hawksford; John Burgess; Susannah Fielding; Zoe Wanamaker; Trevor Peacock; Playwright: William Shakespeare; Director: Nicholas Hytner; Set designer: Vicki Mortimer; Costume designer: Dinah Collin; Lighting designer: Mark Henderson; Music: Rachel Portman; Choreographer: Struan Leslie; Sound designer: John Leonard.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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