The ENO discussion in another section of this forum has prompted me to solicit your thoughts on the RSC.
I was a regular patron for many years - my first 'proper' trip to the theatre was to see Donald Sinden play Othello back in 1979 (this is now a 'historical memory', as it seems unlikely that such a performance will ever be given again, anywhere in the world). In all the time I went, I have to admit to finding their Shakespeare productions pretty much consistently disappointing, if not downright awful. The one exception was a very good Midsummer Night's Dream with Mike Gwilym, Geoffrey Hutchings and a (then little known) Juliet Stevenson, back in 1981. Main stage Shakespeare in particular was shoddy, with indifferent verse-speaking and lots of minor actors building up their parts with 'comic' business.
Things were a lot better in The Other Place and The Swan, where the pressure seemed to be off to produce high production value crowd-pleasing stuff.
The only outstanding thing I've ever seen the RSC do was a marvellous Cherry Orchard with Alec Mccowen and Penelope Wilton, in 1995.
My last visit to the RSC was in 2012, to see Boris Godunov in the Swan. This reminded me of what I always found so depressing about the company - 'cabaret' style performances and a seeming inability to use their stage effectively (one character was completely 'blocked' by another while delivering a major speech - and I was in a good stalls seat).
All in all, I think the RSC trades on a reputation it won for itself in the 60s, when it really was a trailblazing company. But it's one of ACE's sacred cows, so money will continue to be thrown at it, even though it should arguably have lost its grant altogether over its shameful spurning of the Barbican as a London base (which had been given to it as a 'gift' by the Corporation of London).
What does everyone else think?
I was a regular patron for many years - my first 'proper' trip to the theatre was to see Donald Sinden play Othello back in 1979 (this is now a 'historical memory', as it seems unlikely that such a performance will ever be given again, anywhere in the world). In all the time I went, I have to admit to finding their Shakespeare productions pretty much consistently disappointing, if not downright awful. The one exception was a very good Midsummer Night's Dream with Mike Gwilym, Geoffrey Hutchings and a (then little known) Juliet Stevenson, back in 1981. Main stage Shakespeare in particular was shoddy, with indifferent verse-speaking and lots of minor actors building up their parts with 'comic' business.
Things were a lot better in The Other Place and The Swan, where the pressure seemed to be off to produce high production value crowd-pleasing stuff.
The only outstanding thing I've ever seen the RSC do was a marvellous Cherry Orchard with Alec Mccowen and Penelope Wilton, in 1995.
My last visit to the RSC was in 2012, to see Boris Godunov in the Swan. This reminded me of what I always found so depressing about the company - 'cabaret' style performances and a seeming inability to use their stage effectively (one character was completely 'blocked' by another while delivering a major speech - and I was in a good stalls seat).
All in all, I think the RSC trades on a reputation it won for itself in the 60s, when it really was a trailblazing company. But it's one of ACE's sacred cows, so money will continue to be thrown at it, even though it should arguably have lost its grant altogether over its shameful spurning of the Barbican as a London base (which had been given to it as a 'gift' by the Corporation of London).
What does everyone else think?
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