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The
Seagull by Anton Chekhov
Company Burgtheater,
Vienna
Venue King’s Theatre
Address 2 Leven Street
Reviewer Ksenija Horvat
This year, Burgtheater, Vienna, introduced themselves to Edinburgh’s
audience with two plays, Alte Meister and The Seagull.
The accomplished actors of this prominent Viennese theatre company
succeeded in bringing to life Chekhov’s intensely poetic and
tragicomic text, in good modern German translation by Ilma Rakusa.
Amidst the beautifully laid out set with a lakeside painted in the
background, designed by Gilles Aillaud, the tragic story of
Konstantin’s ill-fated love for an aspiring young actress Nina unveils
before us like a delicate Russian lace.
Burgtheater’s actors are renowned for their expressive yet
controlled acting style, and they have confirmed their reputation
on this occasion. Jutta Lampe is frighteningly sensual in her
role as the conniving middle-aged actress Arkadina, and Gert Voss
is full of contradictions as charming but feeble Trigorin. The production
also features yet another first-rate performance by Urs Hefti
as Shamrayev. The young cast match their experienced co-actors. Though
Johanna Wokalek may seem a bit bland at first as delicate young
Nina, in the fourth act she shows true pathos as a disillusioned struggling
actress. August Diehl is excellent as young defiant Kostantin,
and Philipp Brammer's Medvedenko is so wonderfully sensitive
and clumsy that he is truly endearing. However, the real discovery
is an outstanding performance by Maria Hengge whose Masha displays
the whole range of emotions of a torturous Russian soul, and whose
dance scene in the fourth act is honed to perfection. The rest of
the cast should be commended as well for their notable individual
miniatures, turning this piece into a good example of excellent ensemble
work.
Saying all this, the production falls short occasionally due to one
major flaw - its length. At three hours and twenty-five minutes (including
interval) The Seagull can become an excruciating experience
and a number of delightfully performed scenes is lost in the sea of
dialogue. However refined Chekhov's work, it needs rigorous
editing to accord with the modern theatre's standards. By leaving
Chekhov's text uncut, director Luc Bondy and co-director
Geoffrey Layton have displayed indulgence that does no favours
either to the performers or to their audience.
© Ksenija Horvat 30 August 2001
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