Theatre / Bristol old vic

Review: Julius Caesar, Bristol Old Vic

By Shane Morgan  Thursday Jun 15, 2017

There has never been a better time to produce Julius Caesar. A play about leadership offering strength and stability, a massively flawed and ultimately doomed coalition of chaos taking the reins and all parties involved offering the opportunity to make Rome great again.

Politics aside, the now annual Bristol Old Vic/Bristol Old Vic Theatre School partnership has quickly proven itself a world-class platform for graduating students of an accredited regional drama school. It allows those about to enter the real world to bring to a close their three-year training in the classiest way possible. Last year, Timothy West headed up the cast of King Lear. This year’s theatrical legend taking the title role is Julian Glover.

Julian Glover (Julius Caesar) and Lynn Farleigh (Calpurnia). All pics: Simon Purse

Glover and Lynn Farleigh’s Calpurnia make for a perfect first couple. Glover’s Caesar leads with an iron fist whilst Farleigh is the epitome of dignity and grace. Their moments together make you crave for more and make you wish that, on this one occasion, JC had actually listened to his wife.

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There are some strong performances from the BOVTS students. Freddie Bowerman’s Brutus is both strong and stable pre-assassination, offering him up as a man of integrity making him the calm, beating heart of the piece. This is a welcome change from the usual portrayal of a headstrong, bull-in-a-china shop Brutus. Edward Stone’s sly and slimy Cassius, by comparison, offered the necessary contrast pointing to why this partnership was doomed.

Freddie Bowerman (Brutus)

The issues with this production, however, are the broad brush strokes that eliminate any possibility of light and shade, or the necessary nuances that highlight the backroom politics and sly deceptions. Instead, large chunks of the show feel as though the script was typed in capital letters.

Alice Kerrigan as Cinna the Poet

Ross O’Donnellan as Mark Antony displayed great insight when allowed: but at Caesar’s funeral, when Mark Antony gets to show just how smart he is, O’Donnellan had to resort to yelling his entire speech over a screaming mob. Far too often, genuine intrigue, collusion or conspiracy was lost in favour of clunky direction and very loud voices.

Whilst never entirely reaching the heights the play offers, the partnership between school and theatre remains a key platform on the theatre calendar.

Julius Caesar continues at Bristol Old Vic until Saturday, July 1. For more info and to book tickets, visit www.bristololdvic.org.uk/shows.html

Read more: Preview: Julius Caesar, Bristol Old Vic

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