MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 9 December 2018

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1060184

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 41 of 79

10 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 9 DECEMBER 2018 FILM FILM WHILE it may not have the ar- chetypal purity of Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra certainly stands as an iconic love story in its own right, combining the leg- endary playwright's political ap- titude when depicting the power struggles of the Roman world along with his matchless skill in depicting unravelling human psychology. It is perhaps this essential hybridity of the play's make-up that deflates some of its potential power and hold over our imagination… neither an all- out romantic tragedy like, in fact, Romeo and Juliet, nor a politi- cally incisive work like his previ- ous Roman play, Julius Caesar, this story of star-crossed lovers will always feel like something of a straddling compromise. It is in attempting to make this twain of audience expectation meet that contemporary the- atrical directors – such as the currently under-consideration Simon Godwin – face a challeng- ing proposition, and Godwin's own take on the timeless work, beamed live from the National Theatre in London to Spazju Kreattiv at St James Cavalier, Valletta on December 6 cer- tainly made a powerful hack at it, with an ambitious show that just about threatened to collapse un- der it own weight. Following the assassination of Julius Caesar, Roman rule is split among three men – Octavian (Tunji Kasim), Lepidus (Nicholas Le Prevost) and Antony (Ralph Fiennes). The latter, however, is more interested in pursuing a love affair with the Egyp- tian queen Cleopatra (Sophie Okonedo), and neglects both his wife back home and – even more damnably to the Roman establishment – matters of state. When his refusal to send aid during a recent mission against Roman troublemaker Pompey (Sargon Yelda) stokes the ire of Octavian – Julius Caesar's nephew and heir apparent to Ro- man leadership – the situation escalates just enough for Antony to finally sit up and take notice. Agreeing to a marriage of con- venience to Octavian's sister Oc- tavia (Hannah Morrish), Antony appears to be on his way towards establishing a truce between the establishment. But his heart con- tinues to beat for Cleopatra, who is none too ready to let him slip through her fingers. This is a lavish and charged production, updated to a con- temporary setting and brought to imposing life by Godwin and his team – with rotating set de- sign by Hildegard Bechtler and impeccably judged costume work by Evie Gurney, whose pro- cess we were given a look into on Thursday thanks to an accompa- nying mini-documentary. Con- trast between Egypt and Rome is established with a clear-eyed confidence: the showy opulence of the Oriental court represented through serpentine pools and limestone-hewn staircases, with Rome established as a high-tech military superpower employing satellite imagery and decorat- ing its offices with appropriated (read: looted) African icons. Okonedo's Cleopatra – dimin- utive but fiery, brattish but deter- mined, is an occult diva; Gurney admitted to Beyonce's iconic yel- low dress from the 'Lemonade' video being a key inspiration, while a black cape for a blacker moment comes embroidered with insects: an image evoking the Egyptian queen's iconogra- phy and predilection towards the darker side of the natural world. In short, this is clearly an elabo- rately thought-out and curated production of Shakespeare's Ro- man tragedy, though one would have hoped that more attention was dedicated to working out the character dynamics over ensuing it all looks and feels like a block- buster spectacle. Fiennes and Okonedo certainly command at- tention, with Fiennes in particu- lar exhibiting the thwarted en- ergy of the Roman powerhouse in his twilight years; comfortable to retire in Oriental garb but vis- ibly stiff when forced to don the military, imperial threads of Ro- man rule. Okonedo is also to be commended for short-circuiting some of the limitations of her role, as-written (while certainly one of the Bard's most memora- ble female roles, her nature as a femme fatale with a penchant for the superstitious and impulsive can grate nowadays). The Hotel Rwanda/Doctor Who actress weaves from a Cleopatra who oversees a coven of helpers – Charmian (Gloria Obianyo) and Iras (Georgia Landers) – with a wry smile, confident that she has her beloved Antony wrapped around her little finger, to an enraged and ultimately defeated monarch that never succumbs to compromise. However, the roles of the sup- porting players feel bereft of at- tention, with Tim McMullan's Enobarbus in particular – an important liminal character with some of the play's most memo- rable lines – feeling like a missed opportunity; a sleazy hanger-on when he should be intelligent trickster of the piece. Along with Tunji Kasim's brash but ultimately hollow represen- tation of the nervy and calculated Octavian, the approach taken lends an unfortunate hint of the shallow and rushed to a produc- tion that has clearly set its mind on standing out in every way pos- sible. Directed by Simon Godwin for the National Theatre and starring Ralph Fiennes and Sophie Okonedo as William Shakespeare's doomed cross- continental lovers, this latest take on the timeless tragedy was beamed live at Spazju Kreattiv on December 6 ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA QUEEN OF THE NILE QUEEN OF THE DESERT QUEEN OF THE UNDERGROUND OFF WITH HER HEAD ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The verdict Encumbered by a sizeable running time and draining some emotional intimacy by dint of its blockbuster aspira- tions, Simon Godwin's pro- duction nonetheless remains a charged, ambitious show – bringing into focus the full institutional and diplomatic ramifications of Antony and Cleopatra's taboo-smashing love affair, as well as its more universally recognisable emo- tional resonances. Two additional encore (non- live) performances of Antony and Cleopatra will be shown at Spazju Kreattiv at St James Cavalier, Valletta: January 10 (19:30) and February 3 (18:00) Of love and culture shock Teodor Reljic Wronged siblings: Tuji Kasim as Octavian-Caesar and Hannah Morrish as his sister Octavia When passion means doom: Ralph Fiennes and Sophie Okonedo as Antony and Cleopatra ★ ★ ★ A N TO N Y A N D C LE O PAT R A ( 12 A )

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 9 December 2018