On Thursday evening this week I went to the first cinema showing of the Donmar Warehouse, London production of Shakespeare's Coriolanus starring Tom Hiddlestone, directed by Josie Rourke. The set is almost props, just walls covered in projected graffiti and a few chairs. It was a tense, vibrant, nervy production with a tremendous pace & vitality to it be and the scene changes were effected seamlessly. Hiddlestone was magnificently physically impressive in the title role, not entirely shouty, which can become tedious in this role, and very adept in the fight scenes too. He was an impatient even contemptuous listener when being lauded but he seemed almost to shrink from his mother Volumnia's later tirades, brilliantly done by Deborah Findlay, an astonishing performance I thought.
Gore there was a-plenty by the end, but necessarily so, and the crowd scenes, the trubunes, the enemy, all were played well.
I'd not seen Coriolanus in the theatre before, and had only read it on the page where I had difficulty imagining how it would go 'live'. This production certainly provided many answers.
I understand that the Donmar run has been extended and that the cinema presentation will have a good few additional outings. I urge you to see it if you enjoy Shakespeare at white heat and, at around £15/ticket, if you enjoy a bargain.
Gore there was a-plenty by the end, but necessarily so, and the crowd scenes, the trubunes, the enemy, all were played well.
I'd not seen Coriolanus in the theatre before, and had only read it on the page where I had difficulty imagining how it would go 'live'. This production certainly provided many answers.
I understand that the Donmar run has been extended and that the cinema presentation will have a good few additional outings. I urge you to see it if you enjoy Shakespeare at white heat and, at around £15/ticket, if you enjoy a bargain.
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