 |
|
British actor Barrie Rutter plays
Prospero in Shakespeare's classic work The Tempest. The play also features
Sarah Cattle (left) as Miranda. (File Photo)
|
BEIJING,
June 12 -- Shakespeare wrote in The Tempest: "We are such stuff as dreams are
made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." British actor Barrie
Rutter has always lived his dream, and this year marks a special highlight in
his long and distinguished career.
The veteran performer was part of the cast of Old Vic
Theater's Hamlet in 1979 when the company visited Beijing and Shanghai. It was
the first visit by a Western theater group after the "cultural revolution"
(1966-76). Now Rutter is back to perform The Tempest, this time with his own
troupe, the Northern Broadsides.
He remembers vividly the 1979 visit to China as "a
very emotional and spine-tingling experience". It left a strong impression. "We
were greeted with enthusiasm and outstanding hospitality. It was a great welcome
both on and off the stage," he says.
Rutter says he received a similar warm welcome this
January when he stepped off the plane at the greatly changed Shanghai airport.
Now Beijing audiences are ready to be entertained by the brilliance of Rutter's
Bard.
Rutter formed Northern Broadsides after working for
more than a decade each with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National
Theatre.
His new company quickly became the darling of
critics. "The true, beating heart of British theatre," said The Daily Mail and
"the best Shakespeare around" wrote The Independent on Sunday.
The company's repertoire is made up of Shakespeare
and classical texts and 15 years on, the ensemble has blossomed into a
multi-award-winning group, which has toured India, Brazil, the United States,
Greece, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Poland, Germany, Austria and Denmark.
"The core values of alacrity, gusto, inventiveness,
and a desire to always have a good time with an audience, whether it be the
tears of woe in King Lear or the tears of joy in The Tempest, has always been
our overriding desire," Rutter says.
Shakespeare wrote the work in 1611 and it was to be
his last. The Tempest tells a story of love, revenge, humor and forgiveness. A
ship flounders in a mighty storm stirred up by the magician, Prospero.
His mortal enemies are washed ashore onto an
enchanted island inhabited by spirits and half monsters. Intent on exacting
revenge, Prospero invokes a fantastical sequence of events, the climax of which
is beyond his wildest imaginings.
Northern Broadsides will emphasize the musical aspect
of The Tempest, the play with the most songs among the Bard's works.
The cast is all acting, all singing, and the
instruments will include the musical saw, the hang drum (percussion instrument
with harmony) and a walking double bass.
"The text is exactly what we believe to be
Shakespeare's words," Rutter says. "However, given the panache, delivery and
musical element, which this production embraces, its sound has a very modern
feel and is very accessible."
The Tempest will be the third English-language drama
that Beijing Milky Way Arts & Communications Company presents after TNT
Theater, another British troupe, performed Oliver Twist and A Midsummer Night's
Dream in March and May. Chinese theater organizers say the foreign talent offers
locals an insight into the world's best practices.
"We have been presenting performances by theater
groups from the UK because there's much for Chinese theater workers to learn
from their British counterparts," says Cui Yang, general manager of Milky Way.
"At the same time, English-language plays always have good markets in Beijing."
In May this year, TNT Theater's three performances of
A Midsummer Night's Dream almost sold out the 2,167-seat Peking University Hall.
Cui says the audiences for English-language plays
consist of three groups: foreigners who live in Beijing; theater enthusiasts,
especially local aspiring university actors and students studying English.
The play will be staged at the Capital Theater of
Beijing from June 21 to 24.
(Source: China Daily)