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Uncle Vanya at Donmar Warehouse – Review

An all-star Cast Perform at the Donmar

by Steve Schifferes | September 19, 2002 | BBC News Online

Helen McCrory, Mark Strong, Emily Watson and Simon Russell Beale

It was luvvies night at the Donmar in London.

The small foyer was crowded with stars as Hollywood film director Sam Mendes launched his last series of plays at the small theatre where he has made his name.

And he did not disappoint them, producing a spectacular version of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, played (as it should be) as a black comedy and paired in repertoire with Twelfth Night.

Simon Russell Beale played Vanya as a bumbling fool, just as he played Hamlet a few years back in a famous production at the National.

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Categories Reviews

Review: Uncle Vanya

Uncle Vanya

by Michael Billington | Sep 18, 2002  | The Guardian

I have measured out my life in Uncle Vanyas from Olivier’s legendary Chichester production to Peter Stein’s luminous Italian version. But Sam Mendes’s revival, with its mixture of visual clarity and emotional charity, unquestionably belongs in the premier league.

My one doubt concerns Mendes’s use of Brian Friel’s “version” of Chekhov’s play: more a Friel-isation than a faithful realisation. For a start Friel builds up the character of Telegin by giving him a running gag about his unstoppable perspiration; but “Do you sweat much yourself?” is not the kind of question a family dependent would ask of a privileged guest like Yelena.

There is also something faintly judgmental about Friel’s version, so that when Yelena scorns the idea of teaching “snotty brats”, you feel she is being portrayed as a hoity-toity urban snob.

But although the version is over-assertive, Mendes’s cast capture brilliantly the characters’ journey from ignorance to knowledge in the course of a disruptive summer. Simon Russell Beale’s Vanya is simply amazing. He offers you the spectacle of an ironic, intelligent 47-year-old man gazing at Yelena with the dotty helplessness of a moonstruck adolescent: aware of his own absurdity but powerless to prevent it.

But Russell Beale is at his finest in the great scene where he wakes from his dream at the news that the professor plans to sell the estate: he seethes with impotent fury at the realisation that his self-denying existence has been totally without point. And, as he denies the professor’s charge that he is a “nonentity”, Russell Beale extends a charity to the character that beautifully matches Chekhov’s.

What Mendes conveys, however, is the extent to which all the characters’ lives have been changed in the course of a summer. Emily Watson’s marvelous Sonya is no dowdy drudge but a passionate woman who grasps Astrov’s hand with sensual fervour only to come up against his emotional indifference. And Mark Strong gives us an unsuually arrogant Astrov whose ecological ideals are touched with sexual vanity but who in the end is forced to confront his essential solitude. Equally, Helen McCrory’s Yelena comes to understand that her destructive magnetism is a way of making up for the barrenness of her marriage. The one character resistant to change is David Bradley’s perfect Professor who departs wreathed in pedagogic smugness.

Crowning an excellent evening is Anthony Ward’s design. But the ultimate test of any Vanya is whether it stirs you to the depths of your soul; and that is one which Mendes’s production passes with flying colours.

· Until November 20. Box office: 020-7369 1732.

 

Categories Interviews Print Media Uncle Vanya

Mendes’s Dream Team

Helen McCrory talks to Jasper Rees about her roles in Sam Mendes’s valedictory double bill at the Donmar Warehouse

It’s only French actresses who will tell you in that detached, nonchalant way of theirs that, yes, they are beautiful. British actresses are more used to telling you that they’re not.

Take the following strident example. “I think I’m very lucky not to be beautiful,” says Helen McCrory. “I know more actors unhappy about being beautiful than the other way round. I find it really baffling, this modern obsession with people wanting to look good on screen or on stage. Why? Why?” She spits out the words. “I’m an actor, not a model.”

The oddity is that McCrory plays a lot of beautiful women. Yes, she took her first big lead in the television film Streetlife as an owl-eyed, bleach-blonde, child-murdering single mum on a Cardiff sink estate. But her square cheekbones and violently black eyes are better known to television viewers as the face of Anna Karenina, the most head-turning woman ever to hurl herself under a train in the pages of a classic novel.

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