"A Streetcar Named Desire"
Bottom Line: Rachel Weisz dazzles in a memorable production.
A knockout performance by Oscar winner Rachel Weisz as Blanche
DuBois is the main reason to see "A Streetcar Named Desire" at
London's Donmar Warehouse, but the production has many other
riches.
Tony-winning choreographer Rob Ashford turns director here and
brings out all the poetry and drama of Tennessee Williams'
masterpiece set in sultry New Orleans just after World War II.
Weisz has made herself alarmingly thin for the role of a woman
whose vulnerability is as delicate as her needs are wanton and who
is destroyed by a force that she can neither understand nor
control.
Elliot Cowan is suitably muscular, loud and threatening as Stanley
Kowalski, the husband of Blanche's lovestruck sister, Stella,
played well by Ruth Wilson (TV's "Jane Eyre"), and Barnaby Kay
makes her suitor Mitch appropriately stolid.
From Blanche's arrival at her sister's dingy two-room apartment,
rendered evocatively by set designer Christopher Oram using wrought
iron and a spiral staircase, it's apparent that this dreamy lost
waif will clash with her violently territorial and crude
brother-in-law.
Weisz is exactly the right age for Blanche, and though she can do
nothing to make her radiant features appear faded, she conveys
acutely the woman's sense of loss and desperate need for emotional
nourishment. She increasingly is delusional, but her love of
artifice and style is apparent, and it is clear why she is catnip
to certain men.
Ashford brings in characters from Blanche's life to underline the
grip the past has on her fragile imagination and cleverly uses the
same actor (Jack Ashton) to play the delivery boy she toys with and
her late husband in dream sequences.
Blanche's sorrow is the result of seeing the boy she married blow
his brains out after she caught him in the intimate embrace of an
older man. With her home gone and her teaching career in tatters,
she arrives to sponge from her sister with lies about her past and
future, only to run into the immovable Stanley.
Weisz brilliantly succeeds in a role that was originated by Jessica
Tandy on Broadway in 1947 and played in 1949 in the West End by
Vivien Leigh, who went on to win her second Oscar for the Elia
Kazan movie version opposite Marlon Brando.
Brando's shadow looms over any production of Williams' masterpiece,
making life difficult for the actor playing Kowalski, and so it is
for Cowan. He gets the strutting-thug part of Kowalksi right but
misses the vulnerability and insolence and doesn't really succeed
in showing why Stella loves him, nor why he finds Blanche such a
threat.
It's a stalwart performance, though, in a terrific production, and
Weisz makes it unforgettable.
Venue: Donmar Warehouse, London (Through Oct. 3)
Cast: Rachel Weisz, Elliot Cowan, Ruth Wilson, Barnaby Kay
Playwright: Tennessee Williams
Director: Rob Ashford
Set designer: Christopher Oram
Lighting designer: Neil Austin
Music/sound designer: Adam Cork
A Streetcar Named Desire -- Theater Review
By Ray Bennett, July 29, 2009 03:19 ET
"A Streetcar Named Desire"
Bottom Line: Rachel Weisz dazzles in a memorable production.
A knockout performance by Oscar winner Rachel Weisz as Blanche DuBois is the main reason to see "A Streetcar Named Desire" at London's Donmar Warehouse, but the production has many other riches.
Tony-winning choreographer Rob Ashford turns director here and brings out all the poetry and drama of Tennessee Williams' masterpiece set in sultry New Orleans just after World War II. Weisz has made herself alarmingly thin for the role of a woman whose vulnerability is as delicate as her needs are wanton and who is destroyed by a force that she can neither understand nor control.
Elliot Cowan is suitably muscular, loud and threatening as Stanley Kowalski, the husband of Blanche's lovestruck sister, Stella, played well by Ruth Wilson (TV's "Jane Eyre"), and Barnaby Kay makes her suitor Mitch appropriately stolid.
From Blanche's arrival at her sister's dingy two-room apartment, rendered evocatively by set designer Christopher Oram using wrought iron and a spiral staircase, it's apparent that this dreamy lost waif will clash with her violently territorial and crude brother-in-law.
Weisz is exactly the right age for Blanche, and though she can do nothing to make her radiant features appear faded, she conveys acutely the woman's sense of loss and desperate need for emotional nourishment. She increasingly is delusional, but her love of artifice and style is apparent, and it is clear why she is catnip to certain men.
Ashford brings in characters from Blanche's life to underline the grip the past has on her fragile imagination and cleverly uses the same actor (Jack Ashton) to play the delivery boy she toys with and her late husband in dream sequences.
Blanche's sorrow is the result of seeing the boy she married blow his brains out after she caught him in the intimate embrace of an older man. With her home gone and her teaching career in tatters, she arrives to sponge from her sister with lies about her past and future, only to run into the immovable Stanley.
Weisz brilliantly succeeds in a role that was originated by Jessica Tandy on Broadway in 1947 and played in 1949 in the West End by Vivien Leigh, who went on to win her second Oscar for the Elia Kazan movie version opposite Marlon Brando.
Brando's shadow looms over any production of Williams' masterpiece, making life difficult for the actor playing Kowalski, and so it is for Cowan. He gets the strutting-thug part of Kowalksi right but misses the vulnerability and insolence and doesn't really succeed in showing why Stella loves him, nor why he finds Blanche such a threat.
It's a stalwart performance, though, in a terrific production, and Weisz makes it unforgettable.
Venue: Donmar Warehouse, London (Through Oct. 3)
Cast: Rachel Weisz, Elliot Cowan, Ruth Wilson, Barnaby Kay
Playwright: Tennessee Williams
Director: Rob Ashford
Set designer: Christopher Oram
Lighting designer: Neil Austin
Music/sound designer: Adam Cork