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Why Judi Dench plays Titania at the Rose

10 February 2010 by Nicky

Whilst we mere mortals enjoy A Midsummer Night's Dream as a fantastic frolic in the woods, those with brains on a more spiritual level will have studied all the references to Shakespeare's monarch. While we see mixed up lovers, a fairy queen falling in love with an ass and intellectually-challenged actors trying to put on a play for the Duke, they see the fairy court as homage to Queen Elizabeth I.

Last night's opening of the play at The Rose Theatre in Kingston saw two greats of British theatre Sir Peter Hall and Dame Judi Dench joining forces which according to Stephen Unwin "looks set to become one of the defining theatrical events of 2010"

As Titania, many eyebrows were raised when news emerged that Dame Judi would revisit a role she played with Sir Peter directing back in 1962. Yet with so many reference to the Monarch in the text, and with a suitably regal Oberon you suddenly fail to remember a younger Titania. To hear Shakespeare's verse in Dame Judi's control, there was no doubt that we were in the hands of a master. Judi Dench is always stunning, definitely the best Shakespearean mistress of her generation, arguably the world. The other main star of the show was of course not on stage but in Row D of the stalls and throughout the production Sir Peter's hand was clearly felt. The text is everything. Where in so many productions the verse is hurried to favour the plot, here you knew that every meaning was milked out to make it oh so easily comprehensible to a modern audience.

Perhaps I haven't seen enough Dreams but how refreshing for Bottom and fellow mechanicals not to use yokelspeak but remind us that Shakespeare's rural folk came from Warwickshire and should therefore be Brummies. School productions apart, this was the youngest and thinnest Bottom I'd seen with Oliver Chris in the rôle. Not quite as funny as Bob Barrett's Bottom in Propeller's version seen last year at the Rose but for the best bit of stage "business" he won my heart with the last gesture of the first half - as Titania lovingly leads him complete with ass's head to her bower in darkness at the back of the stage, he looks coquettishly over his right shoulder to the audience. He may well have winked. I was laughing too much to have noticed.

Other lovely performances were offered by Rachael Stirling as Helena, Charles Edwards as Oberon and the experienced James Laurenson as Snout. But as Stephen Unwin says in the interview about the show on this site, Dame Judi loves the Rose and instead of writing a cheque, she's appearing here. When she's on stage "it feels like there's a live tradition going back 400 years and something very precious is happening there"


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