Tag: Theatre Royal Bath

Rumpelstiltskin at the egg, Bath Theatre Royal

” . . . The production had a lavishness reminiscent of the Victorian theatre with live music (I would love to be able to see the musicians in future productions, space permitting), well-tailored and colorful costumes (the slick, black leather, punk style suit of Rumpelstiltskin could well appear in Bath fashion week) but most of all the quality of the rhyming words and lyrics introduced a level of imaginative stretch that we no longer associate with family entertainment. . . ”

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EXIT THE KING at the Ustinov Theatre, Bath

“In Ionesco’s list of the realities of life, death looms large. In Exit the King, which is like a panto for grown ups, set in a kind of crumbling Ruritania, designed by Anna Fleischle, we find king Berenger in the last hour and a half of his life. The play stands outside conventional time and space (indeed surreal) so aiming at (we might suppose) a universality of context. . . The play continues the season of high quality international theatre which is becoming the hallmark of the Ustinov under Laurence Boswell.”

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RSC’s HENRY IV Part 1 at the Theatre Royal, Bath

“Wearing a red cushion for a crown and looking not unlike a character out of Captain Pugwash, Antony Sher as Falstaff sits atop a wooden chair as makeshift throne. . . Gregory Doran’s sparkling direction is both inspired and thrilling. This is the RSC at its most dazzling. The speed and range of the proceedings are breathtaking . . . That [Falstaff] is an out and out rogue is never in doubt, yet it is he who delivers a withering account of the real meaning of honour. From deep within his corruption comes uncomfortable truth. Magnificent.”

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BALLET RAMBERT at Bath Theatre Royal

” . . . The Theatre Royal audience rose as one to acclaim the ensemble after a triumphant, exhilarating and sensitive performance to some of the Rolling Stones’ finest early works. In a last moment of silence, Cuban dancer Miguel Altunaga jutted his chin out in a gesture of male bravado and brought the house down . . . This was fabulous stuff, devoured by the audience who at once became animated, to some extent released from the more demanding abstractions that had preceded it . . . Sassy, sexy and strongly recommended.

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THE FATHER at the Ustinov, Bath

“. . . To the final, wrenching, reversal of the roles of father/daughter and the ultimately unbearable last plea in the arms of his nurse this is a magnificent performance (I weep now at its recall). If Mr. Cranham wants to play Lear this is his calling card . . . The Ustinov continues to produce theatre, which by any standard is of the highest order and in this gem of a play has dealt a full hand of relevant, entertaining and moving. “

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