BritishTheatre

Buscar

Desde 1999

Noticias y reseñas de confianza

25

años

lo mejor del teatro británico

Entradas
oficiales

Seleccione
sus asientos

Desde 1999

25 años

Entradas oficiales

Elige asientos

REVIEW: The Philanthropist, Trafalgar Studios ✭✭

Publicado en

21 de abril de 2017

Por

danielcolemancooke

Tom Rosenthal, Matt Berry and Charlotte Richie in The Philanthropist. Photo: Manuel Harlan The Philanthropist

Trafalgar Studios

20th April 2017

2 Stars

Book Now

Christopher Hampton’s The Philanthropist is a play that achieved great success in the 1960s, even going on to secure three Tony nominations. However, it is hard to see any stardust in this funny yet lightweight version, featuring a youthful yet star-heavy cast.

A rethinking of the Misanthrope by Moliere, it is an English drawing room comedy covering a day in the lives of Oxford students. Sweet but supine Philip is too weak to resist the charms of a dinner party guest, whilst his fiancée Celia similarly strays with larger than life author Braham.  The pair quickly reflect on their incompatibility and how Philip’s excessive kindness causes more pain than relief.

Matt Berry and Simon Bird. Photo: Manuel Harlan

Whilst this play benefits from an exceedingly clever start and ending, what lies in between is about as weak and unsubstantial as Philip himself. Whilst Hampton gives his students some lyrical and ponderous conversations, they do not make for great theatre.

If this was unfolding at a party, you’d make your excuses and go to another room. To sit through it can often be a chore; the second half takes an eternity to say not much at all, as Philip and Celia conduct some tedious self-analysis through everlasting speeches.

The play is much stronger when it is on a comic footing; most of the cast come from a comedy background and there are brief flurries of Wildean wit which are very entertaining. However, the characters aren’t well developed enough and the acting isn’t nuanced enough to build the play’s emotional climax.

Charlotte Ritchie and Simon Bird. Photo: Manuel Harlan

The most well-balanced turn comes from Tom Rosenthal as the lazy lecturer Donald, whilst Lily Cole puts in an impressive performance as Araminta.

These exceptions apart, the play is often funny and yet very rarely touching; a missing ingredient which stops this production hitting the heights of its previous iterations.

Simon Bird’s Philip is likeable as Philip but it is hard not to see where Philip begins and Will McKenzie ends; a loveable buffoon is more a punchline than a fleshed out person.

A combination of bad casting and lacklustre directing from Simon Callow leads to an ultimately disappointing evening; the greatest act of philanthropy would be to scrap it and start again.

BOOK TICKETS FOR THE PHILANTHROPIST

El sitio web de BritishTheatre.com fue creado para celebrar la rica y diversa cultura teatral del Reino Unido. Nuestra misión es proporcionar las últimas noticias del teatro del Reino Unido, críticas del West End, y perspectivas tanto sobre el teatro regional como sobre las entradas para teatro en Londres, asegurando que los entusiastas puedan mantenerse al día con todo, desde los mayores musicales del West End hasta el teatro fringe más vanguardista. Nos apasiona fomentar y nutrir las artes escénicas en todas sus formas.

El espíritu del teatro está vivo y en auge, y BritishTheatre.com está a la vanguardia ofreciendo noticias e información oportuna y autorizada a los amantes del teatro. Nuestro dedicado equipo de periodistas teatrales y críticos trabaja incansablemente para cubrir cada producción y evento, facilitando que puedas acceder a las últimas críticas y reservar entradas para teatro en Londres para espectáculos imprescindibles.

NOTICIAS DE TEATRO

ENTRADAS

NOTICIAS DE TEATRO

ENTRADAS