logo
Lost Lear review – Shakespeare's king holds court in a care home

Lost Lear review – Shakespeare's king holds court in a care home

The Guardian4 days ago
A play remains a classic for as long as it continues to yield new meanings. Shakespeare's King Lear, for example, remains open to interpretation. Its story of a retiring king bequeathing his lands to his daughters before descending into madness can, in the right hands, engage with many themes in the modern day including dementia.
It was not really necessary for writer-director Dan Colley to construct a whole new play about it, but that is what the Irish theatre-maker has done in Lost Lear. Venetia Bowe plays a retired actor, now resident in a care home, whose memory has faded in every respect apart from a word-perfect recall of Shakespeare's play. To keep her relaxed, the staff take on the parts of Goneril, Regan, Cordelia and the Fool as she loops repeatedly through her favourite scenes of parental regret.
The idea recalls Enda Walsh's The Walworth Farce, in which a family protect themselves from the outside world by endlessly performing a shaky comedy, and it has a similar interest in mental decline.
The difficulty with plays on this theme is that dementia is a mental state, not a dramatic question. You can evoke the dislocation it creates, as well as the sense of loss and frustration it leaves for loved ones, but you cannot resolve it.
In a classy production, Lost Lear evokes it well. Joined by Peter Daly, Manus Halligan, Em Ormonde and Clodagh O'Farrell on Andrew Clancy's institutional set, Bowe is the youthful woman trapped in an elderly body that we see only as the show progresses. First, we know her for her exacting standards, her brusque disregard for anyone but herself and her facility with language. Only later do we see her as a fragile old woman. Nothing can change, but the play has a sentimental appeal.
At the Traverse, Edinburgh, until 24 August
All our Edinburgh festival reviews
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stage building underway for Oasis in Croke Park: All you need to know for the gigs
Stage building underway for Oasis in Croke Park: All you need to know for the gigs

BreakingNews.ie

time35 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Stage building underway for Oasis in Croke Park: All you need to know for the gigs

Excitement is building ahead of the two Oasis gigs this weekend as stage building has gotten underway at Dublin's Croke Park. The Gallagher brothers will take to the stage for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday. Advertisement Preparations are underway in Croke Park ahead of the concerts this weekend If you are lucky enough to be going to see Oasis play in Croke Park this weekend, keep reading to find out everything you need to know. When and where is it on? Oasis will play two gigs in Dublin's Croke Park on Saturday (August 16th) and Sunday (August 17th). Are there any tickets left? The concerts sold out as soon as tickets went on sale. However, some sporadically appear on Ticketmaster through resale, though they tend to be the more expensive ones (around the €400-€600 price mark). Social media posts advertising tickets for Oasis or Electric Picnic should be treated with a healthy amount of suspicion, Bank of Ireland has warned. Advertisement The bank is warning that it is expecting scammers to be highly active ahead of those major events, saying that some red flags include pressure to buy quickly, unusually low prices, and no opportunity to meet in person. Who are the support acts? The evening will be laced with Britpop nostalgia, as former frontman of '90s alternative rock band The Verve, English singer-songwriter Richard Ashcroft, will perform before Oasis. Liverpool indie rock band Cast are also a support act. When should I arrive? On both days, gates will open at 5pm, and the show will get underway at 6pm. Advertisement MCD said there will be no queuing or camping allowed, and advised concert-goers to allow sufficient time to travel to the event and pass through security checks. If concert-goers do turn up early, they will be turned away at restricted area points around the event site. "Queuing in streets around Croke Park will cause disruption to residents of the area and we appeal to patrons to heed this advice and respect the local community. "Customers should plan to be within Croke Park 45 minutes before show start," MCD Productions said. Advertisement How do I get there and home again? Plan and book your return travel arrangements in advance allowing at least an extra two hours travel time to and from the venue. As traffic and parking delays are inevitable you are encouraged to walk, cycle, use public transport and private coach services. Promoters do not operate transport to/from venue. By Dart: Nearest stations are Connolly Station or Clontarf Road. By bus: Dublin Bus routes 1, 6, 7(a), 13, 15, 16, 27(a/b), 33, 40(b/d/e), 41(b/c/d), 42, 43, 44, 53a, 122, 123, 130, H1, H2, H3. By train: Nearest stations are Connolly Station or Drumcondra. There will be no public parking, and concert-goers are asked to not park illegally in residential areas. Approach routes There are several entry points to the stadium, and you must enter through whichever gate is detailed on your ticket. Advertisement Blue route: (Hogan Stand Seating/Premium Seating): Enter via Jones' Road / Russell Street. Red route: (Cusack Stand Seating/Premium Seating): Enter via St James' Avenue off Clonliffe Road. Yellow route: (Davin Stand Seating): Enter via St Margaret's Avenue. Green route (Standing): Enter via Foster Terrace. Strict traffic cordons will be in place at least two hours before the event, organisers have said. What's the story with security? There will be strict security checks in operation. Everyone will be subject to a search permissible under law, per Purchase Policy. It is a condition of entry, to protect everyone's safety. Additional searches may take place once inside the venue. Due to health and safety, there are strictly no camping/collapsible chairs permitted on site. Security will have to refuse you entry with them. Patrons are especially advised not to bring large bags/backpacks as they may experience delays or be refused entry. There will be no storage facilities on site. Any items left at entrances/in surrounding areas will be removed and disposed of accordingly. Bags larger than A4, signs/flags bigger than A3, flag poles, glass or cans, umbrellas, alcohol, selfie sticks, flares, professional cameras and audio recording equipment will not be permitted. Soft collapsible water skins are permitted in seated blocks. No hard plastic, metal or glass reusables permitted. The pitch is a 'full pour' pitch. All drinks will be decanted into soft cups, no personal bottles of any kind are permitted. There will be free water points for pitch customers. Concert-goers are advised to obey the stewards and gardaí and instructions given over the public address for their own safety. There are no re-admissions to the concert. If you leave, there is no re-entry. Dublin City Council has announced that Dublin's Help Zone van , affectionately known as 'The Nee Naw', is heading to Croke Park to support the Oasis concerts. It will be parked on Mountjoy Square from 4pm to 12am on Saturday and Sunday, providing care and support to concertgoers before and after the shows. What's the weather giving? The weekend is likely to see more of the warm and settled weather experienced this week. Temperatures will generally be in the low to mid-twenties and there will be light easterly breezes. The weather will be mostly dry, though some showers are possible at times. What are they expected to play? Oasis are likely to play all their greatest hits. Here is their set list from August 3rd when they performed at Wembley Stadium in London: Hello Acquiesce Morning Glory Some Might Say Bring It On Down Cigarettes & Alcohol Fade Away Supersonic Roll With It Talk Tonight Half the World Away Little by Little D'You Know What I Mean? Stand by Me Cast No Shadow Slide Away Whatever Live Forever Rock 'n' Roll Star The Masterplan Don't Look Back in Anger Wonderwall Champagne Supernova

Why did we ignore this glorious classic musical for 35 years?
Why did we ignore this glorious classic musical for 35 years?

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Why did we ignore this glorious classic musical for 35 years?

If there is to be a revival of Lerner and Loewe's unrepentantly whimsical 1947 musical – and there hasn't been one in London for 35 years – then Regent's Park Open Air Theatre is the place to do it. Known primarily through the 1954 film starring Gene Kelly and Cyd Charisse, Brigadoon has enchantment in its bones, demanding its audience buy into the idea of a magical Highland village that emerges from the mist for just one day every 100 years. That is considerably easier to do with an outdoor venue in which the falling dusk during evening performances is an inbuilt part of the scenery. And if Drew McOnie's effervescent yet punchy production – the first he has directed since taking over the venue this year – relies on admittedly flimsy source material, then so be it. This show is delightful. There's a hint of Powell and Pressburger's 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death to Rona Munro 's new adaptation, which accentuates the musical's Second World War setting by changing the two American men who find themselves lost in rural Scotland on May Day, 1945, from hunters to shot-down pilots. Is the idyllic village that suddenly appears to them, with its indefatigably happy residents blissfully unaware of the war (indeed, they have no concept of modernity at all), the hallucination of Tommy and Jeff, who are badly damaged by the horrors they have witnessed on the battlefield? Or have the pilots willed the village into being as an alternative to the prospect of dying on the hills before they can be saved? Either way, Munro subtly reinforces the idea of fantasy as a self-protective mechanism by suggesting the village itself originally 'disappeared' in order to escape the 1745 Jacobite uprising. Reality and dream co-exist in both uneasy and bewitching ways in this sensitive update, even as it unapologetically rests on Lerner's undeniably barmy book in which the wounded Tommy falls in love with local girl Fiona (a winning Danielle Fiamanya; she shares the role with Georgina Onuorah) whom he is to lose at midnight when the village vanishes, unless he commits himself to living in Brigadoon forever. McOnie's production retains Brigadoon's old-fashioned MGM musical quality with beautifully choreographed Oklahoma! -style scenes of swirling village women in full skirts and lace-up boots, and men merrily loading wagons with milk churns, images that knowingly lean into the idea of the art form itself as escapism incarnate. Loewe's score is pure romance, too, with its swooning harmonies led by filigree fiddles, the melodies unashamedly pretty. Basia Binkowska's set, with its sloping wood-clad walls and inclines, bears an unfortunate resemblance to a provincial ecology centre, but the pink and blue hue of the lights and the abundance of gorse and heather provide twinkling compensation, as does powerful use of a couple of pipers, particularly during a desolate funeral scene. There are some fine performances – notably from Gilli Jones as a puppyish Charlie and Jasmine Jules Andrews as Fiona's spirted sister Jean, whose marriage the villagers are celebrating. There is darkness, too, in the subsumed violence of an en pointe sword dance, and in Danny Nattrass's performance as the embittered Harry, desperately, unhappily in love with Jean. He provides a haunting counterfoil to the utopian happiness the village supposedly embodies. And as that dusk falls, Munro's ending neatly resolves the plot, while leaving a few unsettling questions lingering in the night air. At Regent's Park Open Air Theatre until Sept 20

Enjoy savings on theatre tickets with London Theatre Direct and Sun Club
Enjoy savings on theatre tickets with London Theatre Direct and Sun Club

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Enjoy savings on theatre tickets with London Theatre Direct and Sun Club

ENJOY savings on theatre shows with London Theatre Direct. And exclusively for Sun Club members, you will get an EXTRA 10 per cent off tickets! The event includes all your favourite West End musicals and plays – including Tina, Back to the Future, Clueless, The Play That Goes Wrong, Stranger Things, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and more. 2 London Theatre Direct is one of the UK's leading theatre ticket agencies, specialising in West End theatre tickets. Sourced directly from the theatre box offices, London Theatre Direct offers discounted theatre tickets across all West End shows, as well as the best available tickets for each venue. Whether you are planning a day out for the family or heading for a solo trip, the West End has something for all ages. And for a limited-time only you can join Sun Club for just £1 for 3 months in our summer sale. How to book tickets with Sun Club Sun Club Membership Programme Step 1: To book your exclusive Sun Club discounted theatre tickets join Sun Club now for just £1 for 3 months in our summer sale. Or £12 for an annual subscription for the first 12 months, then £49.99 a year thereafter. Step 2: Then head to the Offers Hub, select the Theatre Tickets tile, click 'Book' and you will be taken to The Sun & London Theatre Direct website. Step 3: Your exclusive 10 per cent additional discount will be automatically applied at checkout. Step 4: Look for the dates marked with stars to check out our exclusive sale prices. Prices show the exclusive Sun Club member savings. Step 5: Enter your details in the checkout and pay. You will then receive an email with your tickets.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store