I greatly enjoyed Gogol's pungent satire on Sunday. Very good cast including Lenny Henry and Roger Allam and a deliciously sharp English version by Adrian Mitchell. Still available.
Drama on 3: Gogol - The Government Inspector
Collapse
X
-
In that company, I thought Lenny Henry's talents were slightly exposed as being a notch below the rest, but he was fine in the title role and the fact that he sounded a little false worked in the part.
Some great lines too - e.g.
the 'Inspector' describing his terrible hotel room: The most I'll say for it is that the damp patches on the mattress have frozen over and you can have fun watching the bed-bugs skating
and Allam explaining why the hospital is almost empty: The patients have been recovering like flies
Well worth a listen!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
-
-
Originally posted by Caliban View Post[COLOR="#0000FF"]Oh yes, I enjoyed this a lot too. Allam splendid, turning in a 'broad northern' performance that reminded me of Timothy West as 'Bradley Hardacre' in Brass (anyone remember that?).
The Government Inspector is sitting on a hard drive awaiting audition. Might copy to a USB stick to listen to in the car while driving to and from work.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Caliban View Post[COLOR="#0000FF"]Allam splendid, turning in a 'broad northern' performance that reminded me of Timothy West as 'Bradley Hardacre' in Brass (anyone remember that?). James Fleet and Adrian Scarborough very good too, but the highlight for me was Geoffrey Palmer playing against his normal plummy type and being magnificent as Osip, the gravelly low-life chancer servant to the 'Inspector'It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
I agree that this was a terrific production using an excellent translation. It had pace and yet still allowed time to bring out the idiosyncrasies of each protagonist. I was a bit downcast on hearing Roger Allam as a Yorkshireman, his usual rich voice being so wonderful, but his was still an impressive performance, and I thought Lenny Henry grew into his role as the play progressed. The only slight disappointment was that the climactic speech by the Mayor when he discovers the mistake in identity was not explosive enough, not a sheer eruption of pent-up frustration, irritation and petty tyranny. But what a play it is, its comedy as fresh as when it was written.
Comment
-
Comment