|
AFTER
MISS JULIE
Taken from
The Evening
Standard
Written by
Nicholas de Jongh
Performance at The Donmar Warehouse, London in November 2003
|
"Magnificent
Miss Julie"
It is ages since any London stage was so riven with sexual danger
and risk-taking or so steeped in sadomasochistic power-games.
As an upper-crust young lady with erotic ideas several rungs beneath
her social station Kelly Reilly strips herself psychically bare
with a raw thoroughness few young actresses could achieve. The
scene of her triumph is this provocative rewriting of a classic.
Patrick Marber has taken valuable liberties with August Strindberg's
Miss Julie, that 1888 theatrical despatch from the battle-fields
of the sex war. In Strindberg's original a count's daughter defies
the rules of class and stoops to conquer her father's handsome
young man-servant one midsummer's night.
In Marber's transforming hands, though he has disappointingly
rewritten only 30 per cent of the original, the play is updated
to 1945 and moved to Britain on 26 July. The Labour party has
just won its first landslide victory and the scene is the country
estate of a Labour peer - though few such individuals then existed.
Miss Julie, who has danced the night away to a big band, with
gardeners and stable lads, after being jilted by an army officer
fiancé, steps down to the basement kitchen.
Designer Bunny Christie has created a fine, old period setting
though the lighting is far too foggy. Here the estate's chauffeur,
John, (the sturdy, not sexy enough Richard Coyle) is entwined
with his older lover, Christine, the cook, to whom Helen Baxendale
lends an over-generous supply of elegance and class in Michael
Grandage's otherwise beautifully judged production.
Unoppressed by drudgery Miss Baxendale's phlegmatic Christine
has the unsuitable air of a woman used to eating fine meals, not
making them. The altered, relatively modern perspective supplied
by Marber charges Miss Julie with political tension and almost
contemporary relevance.
Millions of new voters who had fought in the war hoped Attlee's
Labour administration would abandon the rigidities and snobberies
of an arthritically class-bound society. Miss Julie and John,
who dream of escaping to classless New York, are casualties of
this old British order.
Marber's
adaptation has a sharp feminist leanings too. It reinforces Strindberg's
psychological and sexual points about women who vault the class
barrier in pursuit of love, though the partygoers' orgasmic hammering
against the kitchenwindows ludicrously parodies Strindberg's midsummer
festivities. As early as the Twenties aristocrats married actresses
or chorus girls and were not condemned. But titled ladies could
not have low-born husbands.
Swaggering loose limbed into view, lips all lurid red, buttocks
wiggling and dressed in a scarlet dress with silver shoes and painted
nails as accessories, Reilly's magnificent Miss Julie has the throttled,
nasal, cawing, bird-like call of the higherflying aristocrat in
predatory mode. The stages of seduction, the sexual teasing and
provoking of Coyle's stiff, dour John are electrifyingly
written and acted. Julie, whose emotionally retarded condition is
over-emphasised, holds out a leg, which she demands the chauffeur
should kneel to kiss and then playfully withdraws it .
But once he has bedded her and she emerges sated and vulnerable,
John takes the powerful, sadistic upper-hand. "Remember your
position," Julie demands in post-sexual anger. "Which
one? There were so many," he retorts. The process leading to
the girl's masochistic decline and fall assumes a chilling awfulness
because so lightly enacted: Strindberg takes on a new lease of theatrical
life.
|
|
|
Copyright
© 2001-2004 RICHARDCOYLE.COM
All Rights Reserved
|