TV REVIEW: Dickens’s ‘The Old Curiosity Shop’

Old Curiosity Shop Sophie Vavasseur and Derek Jacobi x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Far from chestnuts roasting and choristers singing, Charles Dickens’ “The Old Curiosity Shop” is a curiously bleak tale for Christmas. Famous for the death scene of a most sympathetic character, it’s a sorrowful story of greed, poverty and grief, and ITV’s version makes the most of it.

Co-produced by WGBH Boston, the film has a starry cast topped by Derek Jacobi (pictured with Sophie Vavasseur) as the grandfather whose compulsive gambling leads to the loss of the quaint little shop mentioned in the title.

Old Curiosity Shop Toby Jones x325Toby Jones (“Infamous”) plays the unscrupulous moneylender Mr. Quilp (right) who drives the old man into the streets with his devoted granddaughter, Nell (Sophie Vavasseur).

They flee to the countryside, encountering assorted colorful characters like Mrs. Jarley (Zoe Wanamaker), who runs a wax works, and a couple of Punch & Judy showmen (Martin Freeman and Steve Pemberton).

Quilp sets off after them aided by a pair of married lawyers named Brass (Gina McKee and Adam Godley), while an impoverished young lad named Kit (George McKay) helps a mysterious stranger (Adrian Rawlins) who also is seeking the old man and Little Nell.

Writer Martyn Hesford keeps the story tidy, while director Brian Percival moves things along while helping his cast to resist the temptation to be overly Dickensian.

The film was made in Ireland with the help of the Irish Film Board, but it has the look of a low-budget production with many scenes shot in the dark and lots of close-ups. The exceptions are when grandfather and Nell have moments of freedom out in the country when the screen is suddenly filled with greenery.

Jacobi finds some vinegar in what could easily be a sweet old man, and Jones gives some shading to Quilp’s villainy. Stephen McKeon’s versatile score helps considerably.

It’s a dour, depressing tale, however, and attempts at a jolly ending serve only as a reminder that Dickens wrote it as a serial. It looks very much as if he were making it up as he went along.

Screens: ITV1 9-11pm Dec. 26; Cast: Derek Jacobi; Toby Jones; Sophie Vavasseur; Gina McKee; Adam Godley; Anna Madeley; Adrian Rawlins; Geoff Breton; Bryan Dick; Zoe Wanamaker; Martin Freeman; Steve Pemberton; George McKay; Teleplay: Martyn Hesford; Director: Brian Percival; Director of photography: Peter Greenhaigh; Production designer: Michael Pickwoad; Music: Stephen McKeon; Costume designer: Lorna Marie Mugan; Editor: Tony Cranstoun; Executive producer: Gareth Neame; Producer: Andrew Benson A Carnival, WGBH Boston, Ingeneous Broadcasting co-production with the participation of the Irish Film Board.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

 

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FILM REVIEW: Rupert Everett, Colin Firth in ‘St. Trinian’s’

Film Title: St Trinian's

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – To remake eccentric English comedies is seldom a good idea, especially the ones from Ealing Studios with all those wonderful character actors. But against all odds, the new version of “St. Trinian’s” almost pulls it off.

Based on characters created by cartoonist Ronald Searle as a distraction during World War II, the original films from the 1950s and ’60s starred the incomparable Alastair Sim as headmistress of a girls’ school whose pupils turn to anarchy. It was all stocking tops and hockey sticks with the likes of Terry-Thomas, George Cole and Lionel Jeffries ogling the wild young beauties while Joyce Grenfell, Beryl Reid and Hermione Baddeley tried to maintain order.

Directors Oliver Parker and Barnaby Thompson, who have tried their hands at Oscar Wilde, bring the St. Trinian’s girls up to date with Rupert Everett (pictured left with Colin Firth), who apparently had the idea, taking the Sim role as Miss Fritton. It’s like water off a duck’s back even though no one could match the original actor’s extraordinary comic gifts.

Everett’s pretty good, though, playing off himself as the schoolmarm’s conniving brother Carnaby and flirting outrageously with Colin Firth as Geoffrey Thwaites, the minister of education who is trying to close the joint down. The headmistress greets him carrying a small dog named Mr. Darcy.

Firth is in good form too, once again displaying his talent for physical comedy, as he becomes the victim of some aggressively silly pranks by the formidably inventive young ladies, who include the wonderful Gemma Arterton (pictured centre below).

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The semblance of plot follows Carnaby’s daughter Annabelle (Talulah Riley) as she moves to St. Trinian’s as part of her father’s scheme to sell the school for the real estate. She quickly learns the outrageous rules and learns that the enterprising young women also manufacture specialty goods such as killer liquor and designer tampons for a local criminal named Flash Harry, played with assurance by hot British comedian Russell Brand.

When the education minister’s plan to close the school meshes with Carnaby’s desire to profit from its sale, Miss Fritton sets on a scheme to make enough money to carry on misbehaving in the school’s tradition.

When a popular television quiz for schools is to be held at the National Gallery, they plot to enter the contest so they can steal a famous painting. Mischa Barton (“The O.C.”) and Stephen Fry have small cameos as the film turns into a reasonably entertaining caper film featuring lots of very appealing young women, which makes a pleasant change from the usual sweating heavies.

Cast: Rupert Everett; Colin Firth; Jodie Whittaker; Lena Headey; Russell Brand; Talulah Riley; Celia Imrie; Gemma Arterton; Toby Jones; Mischa Barton; Stephen Fry; Directors: Oliver Parker, Barnaby Thompson; Writers: Piers Ashworth, Nick Moorcroft, based on the Ronald Searle cartoons; Director of photography: Gavin Finney; Production designer: Amanda McArthur; Director of photography: Gavin Finney; Music: Charlie Mole; Costume designers: Rebecca Hale, Penny Rose; Editor: Alex Mackie; Producers: Oliver Parker, Barnaby Thompson; Executive producers: Rupert Everett, Nigel Green, James Spring; Production: Entertainment Film Distributors (U.K.), Ealing Studios, Fragile Films; No rating; running time 101 minutes.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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THEATRE REVIEW: Stephen Fry’s pantomime ‘Cinderella’

CINDERELLA x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – The traditional British pantomime, the seasonal romp that mixes fairy tales with broad comedy and lots of innuendo, is given a gay makeover by Stephen Fry in “Cinderella” at the Old Vic.

Many of the traditional elements are in place with men playing the Ugly Sisters, now named Dolce (Mark Lockyer) and Gabbana (Hal Fowler) and a flamboyant Fairy Godmother (Pauline Collins, pictured below).

But the principal boy, usually played by a woman, actually is a boy (Joseph Millson as Prince Charming), while Buttons (Paul Keating) has a crush not on Cinderella (Madeleine Worrall) but on the prince’s aide de camp, Dandini (Oliver Chopping).

Pauline Collins Cinderella x325There are colorful sets and lively music by Oscar-winning composer Anne Dudley (“The Full Monty”), but the whole thing feels rushed, as if it were put together at the last minute.

Also, the tone of Fry’s innuendo probably is too vulgar for little kids, with the emphasis on mispronunciation so that “her highness” becomes “her anus” and “West Virginia” becomes “west vagina.”

Fry’s erudition also is on display with references to Plato and terms like “pathological inanition” to describe Cinderella at her most pathetic, but it lacks his usual flair.

The character actually isn’t that drab, as Worrall makes the mistreated heiress who does go to the ball quite chipper, and her scenes with Keating’s Buttons are good fun.

The two share a love song but not for each other. While Cinderella sings of her longing for the prince, Buttons chimes in with a similar regard for the handsome Dandini. In Fry’s panto world, such affections end up being fully requited, but a happy ending always is required.

The Ugly Sisters are appropriately hairy and gross, but a slapstick sequence involving custard pies appears to be done on the cheap and is staged quite poorly.

British radio personality Sandi Toksvig brings a bright insouciance to the role of narrator of the piece and Collins brightens the entire show whenever she appears as a Cockney Fairy Godmother.

Ian McKellen set the standard for pantomime at Kevin Spacey’s Old Vic the past two years with his Widow Twankey in “Aladdin,” but Fry doesn’t come close to matching it.

Venue: Thee Old Vic, runs through Jan. 20; Cast: Pauline Collins; Madeleine Worrall; Paul Keating; Debbie Chazen; Mark Lockyer; Hal Fowler; Joseph Millson; Oliver Chopping; Matthew White; Penny Layden; Narrator: Sandi Toksvig; Book-lyrics: Stephen Fry; Music: Anne Dudley; Director: Fiona Laird; Set designer: Stephen Brimson Lewis; Lighting designer: Tim Mitchell; Choreographer: Francesca Jaynes.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Dan Fogelberg dies

Dan Fogelberg

By Ray Bennett

Dan Fogelberg, the singer and songwriter whose hits “Leader of the Band” and “Same Old Lang Syne” helped define the soft-rock era, and who used to play now and then in Detroit back in the day, died Sunday at his home in Maine after battling prostate cancer. He was 56.

His death was announced Sunday in a statement by Anna Loynes of the Solters & Digney public relations agency, and was also posted on the singer’s Web site.

“Dan left us this morning at 6:00 a.m. He fought a brave battle with cancer and died peacefully at home in Maine with his wife Jean at his side,” it read. “His strength, dignity and grace in the face of the daunting challenges of this disease were an inspiration to all who knew him.”

Here’s the Dan Fogelberg website

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THEATRE REVIEW: Chichester Festival’s ‘Nicholas Nickleby’

Nicholas Nickleby 2x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – David Edgar has trimmed his nine-hour 1982 Tony-winning play based on Charles Dickens’ “The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby” to two easily digested parts, but they should please audiences just as much.

Revived for the Chichester Theatre Festival, now at the Gielgud Theatre in the West End and headed to Toronto in February, the production has lost scenes and many of the musical numbers from the original but is no less entertaining.

A supremely talented cast of 27, several playing multiple roles, has as much fun as the audience in re-creating the tale of a young man trying to make his way in the world in the often cold and pitiless 19th century England.

As Tony winner Trevor Nunn did in the original, directors Jonathan Church and Philip Franks create a great whirling epic with swift-moving sequences sped along by characters narrating their episodes before entering a scene.

Simon Higlett’s atmospheric design is aided greatly by Mark Jonathan’s lighting and Matt McKenzie’s sound so that clarity is never lost even when characters speak across one another in overlapping dialogue.

The players’ enthusiasm matches their skill in creating an entertainment that establishes the cruelty of the period while retaining an optimism untarnished by oversentimentality.

The familiar Dickens yarn follows young Nicholas (Daniel Weyman, pictured left with David Dawson) as he steps up to take responsibility for his family after the death of his impoverished father. His sister, Kate (Hannah Yelland), and their mother turn to unscrupulous but wealthy uncle Ralph Nickleby (David Yelland) for help, but he sends the boy up north to work in a squalid school for foundlings while forcing the girl to take work with a seamstress.

Nicholas encounters a nasty operation in place at the school and more or less adopts a damaged young man named Smike (David Dawson). Rebelling against the cruelty of schoolmaster Mr. Squeers (Pip Donaghy), they run off and join a theatrical troupe.

There are many encounters with colorfully Dickensian characters in a tale that involves potential marriage partners for Nicholas and Kate, plus larceny, lechery and a great deal of inheritance money that the rich uncle plots to acquire.

All the performers do well, but Dawson makes a memorable Smike, David Yelland is a very polished villain, and Richard Bremmer provides an indelible portrait of knuckle-cracking clerk Newman Noggs.

Both three-hour parts are worth seeing, though the first show probably is the most fun, ending as it does with a funny spoof of “Romeo and Juliet” as performed by a theatrical troupe that wishes to please the crowd a little too much.

Shakespeare, like Dickens, can survive almost anything.

Venue: Gielgud Theatre, runs through Jan. 25; Cast: Daniel Weyman; David Dawson; Pip Donaghy; Veronica Roberts; Zoe Waites; Hannah Yelland; Abigail McKern; Jonathan Coy; David Yelland; Richard Bremmer; Playwright: David Edgar; Based on the novel by: Charles Dickens; Directors: Jonathan Church, Philip Franks; Set designer: Simon Higlett; Lighting designer: Mark Jonathan; Sound designer: Matt McKenzie; Movement: Shona Morris; Music-lyrics: Stephen Oliver; Duncan C. Weldon and Paul Elliott for Triumph Entertainment present the Chichester Festival Theatre production.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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I am trying very, very hard

Maydun Castle, UK x650

 

He who binds to himself a joy, does the wingéd life destroy;

But he who kisses the joy as it flies, lives in eternity’s sunrise

— William Blake

My photo: Maiden Castle in Dorset near Dorchester, England

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MUSIC REVIEW: Led Zeppelin reunion at the O2 Arena

Led Zeppelin 5 x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – For two hours and 10 minutes Monday night, legendary British rock band Led Zeppelin had the privileged fans accommodated by London’s O2 Arena ecstatic listening to 16 of its greatest hits. It was something not seen for almost 20 years.

The evening was to honor the late Atlantic Records founder and producer Ahmet Ertegun, and the band’s devoted throng — many of whom had paid thousands of dollars and flown thousands of miles to see them — could not have been happier.

The Led Zeppelin part of the show began right on time with a giant screen showing clips from U.S. television when Led Zeppelin first toured the States.

Original members Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Robert Plant blasted onto the stage with drummer Jason Bonham taking the place of his father, John Bonham, who died in 1980. The stage was brilliant and the lighting looked great, with an excellent video display offering multiple images behind the live players.

Page, 63, is stout these days, with puffy features and frizzled hair, but his fingers move just as quick. Plant, 59, whose visage is more familiar with all the publicity he’s been doing for his hit album “Raising Sand” with Alison Krauss, appeared like a well-fed Anglo Wild Bill Hickok, commanding the stage and still finding those elusive trills. Jones, 61, was clean cut, all business on keyboards or bass, and Bonham at the drums looked beefy but fit.

Led Zepplin O2 2 x650

They began with a brisk version of “Good Times, Bad Times,” with Page’s guitar crisp and clear but Plant’s voice cramped by feedback. When “Ramble On” followed, Plant’s microphone was working better and he sounded in good voice, growling and snapping just like he used to.

Page swung into “Black Dog,” with Plant teasing the crowd while the guitarist chopped left and right with industrial power. Classic blues chords summoned a long, dynamic delivery of “In My Time of Dying,” and the years started to fall away.

Plant spoke of the “thousands and thousands of emotions that we’ve been going through for the last six weeks … and to be here tonight for Ahmet and with Jason here.”

He said, “This is our first adventure with this song,” and the band played “For Your Life,” from its seventh studio album “Presence.” It was the first time the song had been played live.

Plant then did something the band didn’t always do: He paid tribute to Robert Johnson and his song “Terraplane Blues” ahead of a lively encounter with “Trampled Under Foot” from 1975’s “Physical Graffiti.”

The Staple Singers, the Blind Boys of Alabama and Blind Willie Johnson were name-checked by Plant as he introduced Johnson’s “Nobody’s Fault but Mine,” also from “Presence.”

“No Quarter,” from the band’s fifth album “The Song Remains the Same,” which was always at the heart of their concerts back in the day, allowed plenty of time for rumination on strings by lead Page with Jones on keyboards and Plant finding the glittering high notes of old. “Since I’ve Been Loving You” followed.

Plant said, “It’s peculiar to think of creating a dynamic evening and choosing songs from 10 albums, but there are certain songs that have to be here, and this is one of them.”

“Dazed and Confused” then promptly ruled as Page used a violin bow on his guitar to erect a cathedral of dissonance while the crowd roared its approval. Another required number was “Stairway to Heaven,” which Page performed on a double-necked instrument as Plant’s surprisingly still-supple voice glided on the legendary hit.

“The Song Remains the Same” kept the crowd joyous, and Plant then tipped his hat to drummer Bonham for stepping into his father’s shoes, leading into “Misty Mountain Hop.”

Thanking all the people who had come from more than 50 countries, Plant declared, “This is the 51st country” and commenced “Kashmir,” which was the song most Led Zeppelin fans said they wanted to hear in a music magazine poll. It left the singer in tears and the audience, which had been long on its feet, hollering for more.

Back onstage, the encore inevitably took the form of “Whole Lotta Love.” At the end, Plant saluted Ertegun and Atlantic Records and said good night. It looked like it was all over, but then, Led Zeppelin burst back for a resounding version of “Rock and Roll,” leaving the packed house celebrating the extraordinarily good fortune that allowed them to witness it.

All them good times. Yeah, you can say that again.

Concert set list: Good Times, Bad Times; Ramble On; Black Dog; In My Time of Dying; For Your Life (first time ever played live); Trampled Under Foot; Nobody’s Fault but Mine; No Quarter; Since I’ve Been Loving You; Dazed and Confused; Stairway to Heaven; The Song Remains the Same; Misty Mountain Hop; Kashmir; Encore; Whole Lotta Love; Rock and Roll

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Led Zeppelin at the O2 Arena as it happens

Led Zeppelin x650

By Ray Bennett

Something about a dirigible

Led Zeppelin might be playing in their long-awaited reunion tonight at the big Ahmet Ertegun charity show but if there is any excitement inside the O2 Arena you wouldn’t know it from the media centre.

Deep in the bowels of what was the Millennium Dome in east London, we’re jammed into a drab windowless room with white walls and cafeteria tables where drones sit at computers filing about all the excitement.

The PR firm running the show ran out of badges and it took negotiations with a very officious security company before many of us were given wristbands from another event named Beige Brigade that they were prepared to recognize.

They’ve lumped radio reporters together with photographers and writers so I get to hear the guy from BBC Devon as he does his standup while I struggle with the internet communications.

An IT technician has been grappling with the single flat screen on which tonight’s show is to be screened for the world’s press. For a while there was an image from the BBC’s quiz show “Mastermind” with no sound. Now Bill Wyman is playing with a synch delay between sound and picture and the gentle but steady hum of feedback. Tonight is going to be such fun.

The suspense builds …

The Bill Wyman set is followed by Paul Rodgers doing “All Right Now” and then Foreigner who perform “I Want to Know What Love Is” with St. Luke’s Church of England choir from Portsmouth on Britain’s south coast.

The crowd joins in too although in the media room the buzz is all about the celebrity guest list as the red carpet reporters breeze in reeling off the big names.

Marilyn Manson, David Gilmour of Pink Floyd, the Arctic Monkeys, Kate Moss, Oasis, Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters, Roger Taylor of Queen, Prescilla and Lisa Marie Presley, Steve Winwood, Tony Banks from Genesis, and Jeri Hall are all in the house. Paris Hilton and Paul McCartney are said to be on their way. Separately, we’re told.

Led Zeppelin O2 3 x650

Time is falling away

The show opens right on time with a giant television set showing clips from U.S. TV as Led Zeppelin first toured the States and played Tampa Stadium.

Jimmy Page, 63, John Paul Jones, 61, and Robert Plant, 59 — original members of the band — blast on stage with drummer Jason Bonham, 41, who takes the place of his father, John Bonham, who died in 1980.

They begin with a brisk version of “Good Times, Bad Times” with Jimmy Page’s guitar crisp and clear but Robert Plant’s voice is cramped by feedback. Even on the flat screen, the stage is brilliant and the lighting looks great.

“Ramble On” follows and now Plant’s microphone is working better and he sounds in good voice, growling and snapping just like he used to.

Page swings into “Black Dog” with Plant teasing the crowd while the guitarist chops left and right with industrial power. Classic blues chords summon a long dynamic delivery of “In My Time of Dying” and the years are falling away.

Paying tribute to their elders

Plant speaks of the “thousands and thousands of emotions that we’ve been going through for the last six weeks … and to be here tonight for Ahmet and with Jason here …”

He says, “This is our first adventure with this song,” and the band plays “For Your Life” from their seventh studio album “Presence”. It’s the first time the song has been played live.

Plant pays tribute to blues singer Robert Johnson and his song “Temperance Blues” ahead of a lively encounter with “Trampled Under Foot” from the 1975 Zeppelin album “Physical Graffiti.”

Blind Willie Johnson, the Staple Singers, and the Blind Boys of Alabama are each name checked by Plant as he introduces Johnson’s “Nobody’s Fault But Mine,” also from “Presence”.

No quarter asked and given

“No Quarter” from the Led Zeppelin’s fifth album, which was always at the heart of their concerts back in the day, allows plenty of time for rumination on strings by lead Page with Jones on keyboard as Plant finds the glittering high notes of old. “Since I’ve Been Loving You” follows on.

Access has now been granted inside the auditorium just in time to hear Plant say: “It’s peculiar to think of creating a dynamic evening and choosing songs from 10 albums, but there are certain songs that have to be here, and this is one of them … ”

“Dazed and Confused” rules as Page uses a violin bow on his guitar to erect a cathedral of dissonance while the crowd roars. Another required number is “Stairway to Heaven”, which Page plays on a double-necked instrument as Plant’s surprisingly still supple voice glides on the legendary hit.

Now with a view of the stage it’s possible to appreciate the excellent video display with multiple images behind the live players. Bonham at the drums looks beefy but fit. Jones is clean cut, all business on keyboards or bass. Page is stout with puffy features and frizzled hair.

Plant, whose visage is more familiar with all the publicity he’s been doing for his “Raising Sand” album with Alison Krauss, appears like a well-fed Anglo Wild Bill Hickok, commanding the stage and still finding those elusive trills.

“The Song Remains the Same” keeps the crowd joyous and then Plant tips his hat to drummer Bonham for stepping into his father’s shoes, leading into “Misty Mountain Hop”.

All them good times …  

Thanking all the people who have come from more than 50 countries, Plant declares “This is the 51st country,” and commences “Kashmir”, which was the song most Led Zeppelin fans said they wanted to hear in a music magazine poll. It leaves the singer in tears and the audience, which has been long on its feet, hollers for more.

Back onstage, the encore takes the form inevitably of “Whole Lotta Love”. At the end, Plant salutes Ertegun and Atlantic Records and says good night. It looks like it’s all over but then they burst back for a rollicking version of “Rock and Roll”.

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Othello’ at the Donmar Warehouse

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Audiences who flock to see “Othello” at the Donmar Warehouse because of stars Ewan McGregor and Chiwetel Ejiofor will not be disappointed, but it’s Shakespeare’s women who steal the show.

othello reilly fairley x325Kelly Reilly and Michelle Fairley (left) are mesmerizing as the wives whose faith in their men is betrayed wickedly. Reilly is heartbreaking as the faithful but doomed Desdemona, and Fairley brings flint to a woman who finally sees how she has been duped.

Ejiofor captures the nobility and trusting nature of the warrior Othello, while McGregor portrays the duplicitous Iago as a cur, eager for his master’s approval while doing everything he can to destroy him.

Director Michael Grandage presents the play on a bare stage with a bleak wall as the backdrop and gives full rein to Christopher Oram’s design, Paule Constable’s lighting and Adam Cork’s music and sound to enhance the drama.

It works beautifully, and Grandage wastes no time in setting the story in motion with Iago declaring his hatred for Othello vividly in the first scene. Through voice and gesture, McGregor makes it clear that Iago’s loathing is not only because Othello has appointed another to be his lieutenant but also because he is black and has claimed the delectable Desdemona.

othello ejiofor mcgregor x325Ejiofor renders Othello’s speeches about being an unruly Moor with vigor and charm, and it is quite clear how he has won his bride. It equally is no surprise that others covet her, including the estimable Cassio, played with tremendous verve by Tom Hiddleston.

When Othello’s command moves from Venice to the island of Cyprus, Iago is given the chance to solicit another lovelorn suitor, Roderigo (Edward Bennett), to murder Cassio and convince Othello of his wife’s infidelity.

Everything goes badly, of course, but while most renderings might have emphasized Shakespeare’s iconic detailing of love and betrayal between two men, Grandage highlights the impact on their wives.

It makes for scintillating drama. There is a wonderful scene when Desdemona has realized that her husband has rejected her and she sings of another’s lost love. Emilia helps Desdemona out of her stiff corsets as she sings the lament, “Willow, willow, willow.” Reilly captures the moment perfectly, her voice whispery but strong as being freed from her clothing’s constraints foreshadows a sadder release.

It might have been Othello who loved not wisely but too well, but it was Desdemona who paid the price, and this superb production won’t let you forget it.

Venue: Donmar Warehouse, runs through Feb. 23; Cast: Chiwetel Ejiofor; Ewan McGregor; Kelly Reilly; Michelle Fairley; Tom Hiddleston; Edward Bennett; Michael Hadley; Michael Jenn; Martina Laird; James Laurenson; Playwright: William Shakespeare; Director: Michael Grandage; Designer: Christopher Oram; Lighting designer: Paule Constable; Composer/sound designer: Adam Cork.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Joni Mitchell still has that ‘Shine’

Cigarette in hand, Joni Mitchell was in fine form on the BBC’s Sunday morning public affairs program “The Andrew Marr Show” today. Speaking from Los Angeles, Mitchell was unapologetic about releasing “Shine,” her first album in about 10 years, through Starbucks.

Shine Joni Mitchell album cover x300She said, “Cigarettes and coffee are my two vices, and Starbucks has been very good to me. Sorry.”

The Canadian artist denied that she was ever a folk singer and said she has been smoking since she was 9 but it had nothing to do with shaving the top octave from her singing voice: “I had three octaves but I blew out the top register doing rock ‘n’ roll.”

When Marr asked if fans were likely to see her in concert, Mitchell said she didn’t enjoy performing — “I always felt inadequate” — and nor did she think she could hold a room as a performer. Not many artists can, she said, “Maybe Prince, and Jagger runs back and forth. But rock ‘n’ roll is dance music. Why are we sitting there watching performers?”

Reviewers have been kind to the new release: “A strange, intoxicating and unsettling album,” from Alexis Petridis in The Guardian; “One hell of a comeback” from Jon Lusk at bbc.co.uk.

Here is an EPK for “Shine” on YouTube

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