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The COMPANY of PLAYERS
Reviews: The School Of Night
On stage what a Tour de Force! Never mind the play! and it was worth all the frustration to see such a strong cast, playing with confidence and pace relating well to each other, maintaining their characterisation and concentration, directed with purpose and aplomb. Alan Southgate as the eponymous Marlowe, played him with such energy and assurance that I was left quite breathless at times, he was absolutely right for the part carrying all before him, his jealousy of Shakespeare, and almost, inevitably, writing his own death as if it were a plot in a play. I did feel though that he could have given the character a bit more light and shade, to balance and contrast the enormous explosions of passion that erupted throughout the performance. Dan Breeze as Thomas Kyd was suitably weak and hesitant, giving indications of what would eventually happen, he should have given the character a bit more grit, he was after all a fairly important playwright in his own right. Roger Wallsgrove as Ingram Frizer was less convincing for me, he moved fairly ponderously around the stage, often standing still for quite long periods and blocking the view from where I was sitting. I guess all this was meant to indicate menace but it did the opposite, I felt like telling him to move!
The duel was so well fought, so well rehearsed and so convincing in such a small area, a great idea to use the diagonal so congratulations to both actors and Bret Yount. Paul Morton and Fran Copeman gave fine performances as the Walsinghams, although I could not really see how your Sir Thomas could have found time to foil so many plots against the Queen's life! Rachel Wallace as Rosalinda was quite superb, it is a long time since I have seen such a controlled piece of physical theatre on the amateur stage, she really acted with her whole body and it was a pleasure to watch her performance. I wonder if the casting of Patrick Sunners as a 'Spanish-looking' Sir Walter Raleigh was deliberate on the director's part adding poignancy to the Catholic threat, or not? However he was suitably swash-buckling, but where did he get those filter-tips from? With such painstaking detail in the costumes ( Shelagh Maughan) and the props, mostly (Angela Reiss) and the set (Grant) to give a sense of period and atmosphere, surely they should have used pipes?
David Supper is the Little Theatre Guild representative of the Progress Theatre, Reading, Berks. The theatre seat 98 and last season ran 7 productions which included Much Ado about Nothing and The Comedy of Errors, both by Shakespeare, Copenhagen, Stepping Out, Rama Sita, Too Clever by Half by Ostrovsky and a programme of members' work.
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