The Tempest

The TempestIt might seem to be rather overdoing a point during the recent appalling weather to visit The Tempest, not once, but twice…

We did it the wrong way round, really, as we went to the live screening the day before we went with our usual group of theatre-loving friends to Stratford, to see it really live.

We’re fans of the screen viewings – we enjoy the interviews which are always illuminating, and we appreciate the fact that the cameras know where and when to focus on the main action. One can so easily be distracted in the theatre by something else – doubtless interesting but not vitally so.

However, always before we have already seen the performance. This time, it was just the way it went with the dates, as we had booked our theatre tickets almost a year ago, long before we even knew there would be a live screening. The night before we had a lovely evening at the Northern Light Cinema in Wirksworth but the visual effects – so dramatic in the theatre – lost just some of their impact on the screen. We enjoyed it but rather wondered what all the fuss was about…

We discovered the next day. We set off in icy conditions and with some trepidation, trying not to think of the forecasts warning of imminent driving snow and freezing temperatures. We all got to Stratford safely, and enjoyed a quick pre-theatre lunch beforehand, grateful at this stage that we only had driving rain to contend with.

The RSC theatre of course is warm and dry, and the seats comfortable. However, directly ahead on the stage is the enormous hull of a boat and almost without warning one is pitched into a violent storm, where everything seems to shudder and heave as Prospero causes the ship to wreck despite the panicked efforts of the crew. From then on we are transported to another world.

A world where nothing is as it seems and thinking about it now I find it hard to be sure how much of what I saw really was ‘real’ and how much ‘performance capture’ illusion where an actor’s features and movements are electronically tracked and translated into computer generated imagery. The changing and often very dramatic weather conditions and settings are most impressive but easier to cope with; however, Ariel and his digital avatar, manipulated by sensors tucked under his clothes, appear at one and the same time and the actors have to interact with both versions…

In a way I think (hope) one is not meant to analyse and explain everything. Shakespeare’s intention was to recreate the magical atmosphere and dramatic effects of a 17C masque, and this 21C version tries to capture Shakespeare’s intentions in a throughly contemporary way. It most emphatically does!

Meanwhile, the themes – the use/abuse of power, utopian ideals of the perfect community, ‘magic, and its relationship with politics are timeless, and even more relevant for us now, with Brexit, and the rise of Trump with his disturbing choice of allies, and who chooses to believe what it suits him to believe, fashioning his own imaginary magical reality.

However, such worries aside, we all had a really magical time, believing/not believing what we were seeing. Simon Russell Beale as Prospero is truly magnificent. Ariel (Mark Quartley) is outstanding. The Tempest was a truly impressive production.

How extremely lucky we are to be able to enjoy all that the RSC has to offer.

Published by

Marion Fuller-Sessions

Retired and downsized, and sadly now widowed, but keeping in touch with family and friends and friends far and wide via my blog

2 thoughts on “The Tempest”

  1. Hi Marion, I last saw ‘The Tempest’ at Clare College in an open air college production in Clare gardens in May 1962. I was the stage hand with responsibility for creating the sound effects for the storm! I rigged up a contraption, of my own design, out of sight behind some bushes using scaffolding poles to hold some canvass over an open cylindrical drum which I rotated where storm noises were required. The results were just what the director wanted and he and the cast were delighted with my contribution to the performance. It would be fun to see it again. Now that my brother is living near Stratford we will be going to the theatre some time soon. We must also see a live performance in a cinema like you, Wirksworth or Derby Quad. Best wishes, Mike

    1. Thank you Mike. You’d have been most interested to see this version of your effects. How lovely for you that your brother is now living near Stratford! It might be worth keeping an eye on what’s coming up at the RSC https://www.rsc.org.uk/whats-on/ as things seem to book up very quickly. It seems a gesture of faith booking a year in advance, but it is amazing how quickly this date in the distant future suddenly comes up. And, as you say, for the screen version, Belper, Wirksworth, the Quad…

Comments are closed.