Review: RSC's Don Quixote, Garrick Theatre - fun and poignancy but differing opinions on the 'musical' elements
11/11/2018
Their adventures are vividly and cleverly brought to life utilising a variety of media including puppetry, acrobatics and wire work but it is the small, often background detail which richly elevates this production.
Rufus Hound and David Threlfall in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
It's taken two years for the RSC's hit Don Quixote to make it to the West End with David Threlfall and Rufus Hound reprising their roles as the hapless knight errant and his squire.
Adapted by James Fenton it not only notches up the famous scenes from Miguel de Cervantes novel but the production design and direction find new niches of humour and fun.
It tells the story of Don Quixote (Threlfall) who, having read too many romantic novels, decides he is a knight errant and sets upon a mission to restore chivalry.
He takes with him illiterate farmer Sancho (Hound) to act as his squire and in the first half, we see them embroiled in a series of absurd scrapes brought about by Don Quixote's delusions and fantastical notions.
Tom McCall David Threlfall and Richard Leeming in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
Their adventures are vividly and cleverly brought to life utilising a variety of media including puppetry, acrobatics and wire work but it is the small, often background detail which richly elevates this production.
From the personality of Don Quixote's horse and Sancho's mule as depicted by a look or facial movement to the hapless servant bumping into pieces of the set at the back, there always seems to be something amusing going on.
Hound's Sancho breaks the fourth wall, draws the audience in at the start as both co-conspirators and the subject of jokes in a set piece that echoes stand-up.
Rufus Hound and Natasha Magigi in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
As the comic sidekick he dominates the first half but after the interval, when the play takes on a different tone it is Threlfall who comes to the fore.
Don Quixote the ridiculous becomes the cruelly ridiculed and Trelfall handles this transition in a way that plucks at heartstrings and evokes sympathy.
For me, the only bum note was the singing. I had checked for references to songs and lyrics but must have missed them - musicals really aren't my thing.
Fortunately, there aren't full blown stop and sing numbers, rather scenes where lines are half sung which nonetheless grated and frustrated the pace of storytelling.
But it is a personal preference my friend Kate, who accompanied me, is a musical fan and had the opposite view and thought those sequences served the play well.
Putting that to one side Don Quixote is marvellous fun, the first half full of laughs the second more poignant. I'm giving it four stars and Kate gave it five.
Definitely one for the family over the festive season, you can see it at the Garrick Theatre until 2 February.
Keep scrolling for more production images and related posts.
Rufus Hound and David Threlfall in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
Farrell Cox, Ruth Everett and Rosa Robson in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
Joshua McCord in the Royal Shakespeare Company's Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan.
The Royal Shakespeare Companys Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan
The Royal Shakespeare Companys Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan
The Royal Shakespeare Companys Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan
Gabriel Fleary in the Royal Shakespeare Companys Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan
The Royal Shakespeare Companys Don Quixote London 2018. Photography by Manuel Harlan
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