by Daniel Hill
Last week I saw ‘The
Dresser’ at Chichester Festival Theatre. This is the same production that has
recently been on the West End and starred Ken Stott and Reece Shearsmith. Not
knowing much about the play, I went in with an open mind hoping for the best.
After I had purchased
a program I read about how it had been speculation that the playwright had
based the two main characters on himself and the actor whom he had dressed
previous to becoming a playwright. It was clear that this was very possibly the
case, although the playwright has responded by denying the claims.
The play is about a
respected actor named Sir (Stott) who has recently been caught by age and
edging nearer to his death. His dresser named Norman (Shearsmith) was doing his
best to keep Sir alive. Stott and Shearsmith worked brilliantly alongside each
other and created the on-stage friendship which was needed for this character.
The show was stolen by
Reece Shearsmith who arguably had the better character but was strong throughout
the play. The character Norman went through a journey of many emotions and
personalities. The one-liners were delivered with conviction and often gained
audible laughs from the majority of the audience. Shearsmith brought an amazing
characterisation, especially when Norman slowly began to breakdown towards the
end of the play. The line that ended the play was delivered by a tearful actor
but I did not feel that the line itself had much relevance. I thought this was
a shame as after a superb performance this sent me away considering the
importance of this line and how I thought it was not the best choice to end the
line. After considering this for a while ideas popped into my head. The line
was the same as a line the Fool says in King Lear. I wondered whether this
could be suggesting that Norman had realised that he had in fact played the
Fool in Sir’s life which makes the choice of the line quite poignant.
Sir was played by Ken
Stott with power, even when his first entrance consisted mainly of a flood of
tears. Although not as prolific as Shearsmith in this performance he was able
to create a character and take the audience on a journey and make them forget
that it was Stott as he had become Sir through costume, makeup and
characterisation.
Overall I thought this
play was breath-taking and I believe it definitely deserved a longer West End.
Hopefully another cast will create such a breath-taking production of this play
in the future although I am sure it will prove to be hard.
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