The Upstart Crow
The Upstart Crow is a stage play by Ben Elton developed from his BBC TV sitcom Upstart Crow.
The Upstart Crow | |
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Written by | Ben Elton |
Date premiered | 7 February 2020 |
Place premiered | Gielgud Theatre, London |
Genre | Comedy |
Setting | 1605, London |
Production history
The play, directed by Sean Foley, began previews at the Gielgud Theatre in London's West End on 7 February 2020, with an official opening night on 17 February. The play was intended to run until April 25 2020, but only ran up to mid-March, with the remainder cancelled as a result of restrictions put in place due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]
Cast and characters
The main cast included many who featured in the TV series, amongst them:[2]
- David Mitchell as William Shakespeare. This was Mitchell's stage debut.[3][4]
- Gemma Whelan as Kate
- Helen Monks as Susanna Shakespeare.
- Rob Rouse as Ned Bottom
- Steve Speirs as Richard Burbage
- Mark Heap as Dr. John Hall.
Synopsis
The play is set in 1605, with Shakespeare depressed after the death of his son Hamnet, and needing to write a successful play to maintain his position. The author calls it "an entirely original excursion, not a 'TV adaption'".[5]
The plot was summarised by the Evening Standard critic Nick Curtis: "Shakespeare gets over writer’s block by nicking ideas from other people. His landlady’s daughter, wannabe actress Kate[...] gives him the plot of King Lear. A pair of noble Egyptian twins recall Twelfth Night — as does the humiliation-by-codpiece of Mark Heap’s lovestruck puritan — and also spark the idea for Othello. You can spot the mile-off joke about The Winter’s Tale the moment the dancing bear appears."[6]
Reception
The play was well received by critics. Mark Lawson wrote in The Guardian: "Punchlines and slapstick are meticulously timed, culminating in a spectacular sight-gag involving costumes...including a bear suit, an unfeasibly large codpiece and an escalatingly testicular pair of the baggy-thighed trousers. Although some of the new Puritans who police our own culture may find the latter too broad, the mix of bawdy and scholarly references is authentically Shakespearean."[7] In the Daily Telegraph, Dominic Cavendish wrote "Ben Elton has restored himself to favour in theatreland with this joyously silly spin-off to his much-loved BBC Shakespeare sitcom."[4]
References
Notes
- "West End and UK Theatre venue performances cancelled due to coronavirus". What's on Stage. 16 March 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
- Programme (2020), p. [16]
- Gielgud Theatre website, accessed February 16 2020.
- Cavendish, Dominic (17 February 2020). "The Upstart Crow review, Gielgud: welcome back Ben Elton, all is forgiven". Telegraph.co.uk. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
- Programme (2020), p. [4]
- Curtis, Nick (18 February 2020). "Upstart Crow review: Panto meets pentameters in funny but exhausting Shakespearean play". standard.co.uk. Evening Standard. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
- Lawson, Mark (17 February 2020). "The Upstart Crow review – authentically Shakespearean right down to the puffling pants". Theguardian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
Sources
- Programme, The Upstart Crow, Gielgud Theatre (2020)