Sunday, 25 August 2024

Uncle Vanya, Ensemble Theatre, 26 Jul-31 Aug


 Why does Chekov keep on coming back? It might be a combo of some dense, rich roles for actors to get their teeth into, the themes of a society on the verge of breaking down, of frustrated lives and failed interactions, of a lost generation at a turning point in history, all combine to maintain interest about 120 years after his plays were first performed. 

This small scale production at the Ensemble uses one simple set and a smaller-than-usual cast (with Vanessa Downing doubling in two small roles) to pour the drama directly onto our laps, as a long summer on a remote russian estate begins to boil over as Vanya begins to act out his frustrations, simmering romantic tensions build between his niece Sonya, the local doctor Astrov and the owner of the estate's wife, and the professor cannot help himself from boring everyone. Joanna Murray-Smith's translation occasionally gets a little too excitable about leaning towards the contemporary in the language (Yelena at one point calls Vanya a little bitch, which... is not inaccurate but it's a little out of 1890s Russian vocab), but otherwise mostly slips onto serving Chekov's original text, keeping things tight and moving. 

It's a strong cast - Yalin Ozucelik as Vanya is the centre of our attention, frustrating, needy, broken and oh so sympathetic when he finally breaks and unreels his frustrations. Tim Walter as the doctor is a little too flat in aspect - the production kind of suggests the reason two different women are drawn to him is more due to him being the best prospect in the region rather than anything particularly magnetic about him. Chantelle Jamesion as Yelena drags us into her dilemma - having obviously made a wrong choice when young she's determined not to make it worse but is drawn towards other options.  Abbey Morgan is a young and bright Sonya with a yearing heart. David Lynch as Serebrykov sells the self-important mediocrity of the man, and John Gaden as Telyehgin gives his character a few strong moments of focus. Vanessa Downing's double casting unfortunately plays a little as a stunt - she distinguishes the roles well but it's always clear that it's the same actress playing both for no real benefit. 

This is a bit of a mixed bag of a production but for those who like to wallow in their Chekhov it's a nice chance to wallow again. 

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