by Dawn S
The production referenced in this poem is the RSC’s 1984 production of ‘Richard III’, in which the late Antony Sher played the title role, who famously has a disability — he is referred to as a hunchback, caused by the condition kyphosis (though it has recently been discovered that the historical Richard III had scoliosis, a different spinal condition). In his book ‘The Year Of the King’, Sher relates how he visually created this disabled character, despite being an able-bodied person himself; to do so he used methods many today consider exploitative and unethical. There is significant debate within theatre at the moment regarding accessibility and representation of disabled characters onstage: who should be allowed to play these roles, and can a disabled character be portrayed ethically by an able-bodied actor? How can we unite Sher’s highly acclaimed presentation of the role with the unethical means used to come by it?
He doesn’t play the cello,
and I’m not sure I can really teach him how.
The hollow body arched between the knees,
right hand claw-like at the bow, and I ask him
whether he’d do it again, his Richard,
would he do it like that, this time? Tell him he was
brilliant and there isn’t much I wouldn’t do
to see that bottled spider sprawled on stage but
still, would he do it again? His answer is ambiguous.
I say, There is something about this instrument which feels
a lot like kyphosis, don’t you think? We are hunched
over fingerboard, hunched over bridge. A chromatic
scale, to illustrate the curvature — not that you knew
at the time what it was, or could ever set eyes on that
rattlesnake spine. Was it exploitative, I ask him, in 1984,
that groundbreaking act of theatre? He is weary-eyed
and I remember that he has done Lear now, all his morals
unbound and retied to confusion, ecstasy, oblivion.
Vibrato, tremolo, harmonic. Arpeggios the soundtrack
to that escapade of fear, the jaunted journey across
the stage, the sly, perverted comments to the scathing
wife-to-be, and he says Well, I don’t think Dick
was ever meant to be played completely ethically,
do you? Perhaps not, I say. He straps the cello
to his back. Although maybe I shouldn’t have
drawn all those disabled people in the book, you know. Sighs. Staggers with the weight of it.
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