Latest news with #EmmanuelAkwafo


The Guardian
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
A Midsummer Night's Dream review – Nicholas Hytner's revels return with bawdy, uninhibited mischief
Shenanigans reign in this neck of the woods. Boogying back to the Bridge after six years, Nicholas Hytner's rollicking production of Shakespeare's great comedy feasts on bawdy mischief and aerial antics. Radiating charisma, Emmanuel Akwafo's uninhibited Bottom instructs his ragtag group of am-dram players to rehearse 'most obscenely and courageously'. Hytner's production, with somewhat more rigour and expertise, takes note. Bunny Christie's luscious set of beds, leaves and trapdoors has us at once rising from the murky depths of the forest and floating among the clouds of sleep. Half the audience mill amid the foggy underland, skilfully shuffled by stage management, while the rest of us sit up among the fairies. The immersive setup complements the play's shapeshifting unreality; in this world, we become another set of magical creatures lurking in the shadows. Rules of gravity are forgotten here. Led by David Moorst's spiky, spidery Puck, who reclaims his role from the original production, the disco-ready fairies barely touch the ground, gambolling instead across bedframes and dangling effortlessly from loops of aerial silks. Their astonishing acrobatics have echoes of the 1970 Peter Brook production of this play, albeit with more brazenly bisexual energy, which sweeps over the show like confetti. In the lovers' clamorous scene of misunderstandings, Puck amuses himself by floating above them, swivelling the direction of their affections like spinning tops. One of the production's greatest feats is switching the dialogue of fairy royalty Oberon (JJ Feild) and Titania (Susannah Fielding), which puts the power firmly in Titania's hands. With the two actors doubling up as Theseus and Hippolyta, their motivations and memories are folded into one another, so that Hippolyta's simmering rage at Theseus's entrapment of her feeds Titania's vengeful actions towards Oberon. The gender-flipping also gifts us Oberon's riotous seduction of Bottom, a scene so joyful the whole audience seems drunk on delight. The cast are comedy gold, their ad-libs winking to the crowd, though we could do without the distraction of the looser modern soundbites. Unlike in the 2019 run, the party doesn't carry on beyond the show, but the production itself is enough. When all the characters are awake and the evening's events seem distant, memories of what they did and who they kissed flicker through them. Even when dawn breaks, the night of giddy revels remains. At the Bridge theatre, London, until 20 August


The Guardian
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Re-met by moonlight: A Midsummer Night's Dream returns to London's Bridge theatre
Hanging around during rehearsals for A Midsummer Night's Dream Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian Felicity Montagu, centre, plays Quince Emmanuel Akwafo (Bottom), David Moorst (Puck) and Dominic Semwanga (Flute) in rehearsals David Moorst with Susannah Fielding in the production, designed by Bunny Christie A Midsummer Night's Dream is an immersive production with some audience members up close and personal Emmanuel Akwafo, right, with JJ Feild, who doubles as Oberon and Theseus A Midsummer Night's Dream has movement direction by Arlene Phillips David Moorst (Puck), top, Divesh Subaskaran (Lysander) and Paul Adeyefa (Demetrius) There is co-direction and co-movement direction by James Cousins The costumes are designed by Christina Cunningham, with additional outfits by Bunny Christie Susannah Fielding and JJ Feild A Midsummer Night's Dream has lighting by Bruno Poet The composer is Grant Olding, with sound design by Paul Arditti Emmanuel Akwafo (Bottom) and Hilson Agbangbe (Starveling) in the production, with fight direction by Kate Waters The hair and make-up designer is Susanna Peretz A Midsummer Night's Dream is at the Bridge theatre, London, until 20 August