The Daily Telegraph

This head-spinning journey would benefit from a more leisurely pace

- In Northampto­n until Sat (tickets: 01604 6248110), then touring until March 24. Tour details: simple8.co.uk Theatre By Dominic Cavendish

A Passage to India Royal & Derngate, Northampto­n; touring

The finest stage adaptation of a literary work I’ve ever seen wasn’t, in effect, an “adaptation”; it was almost an admission of defeat translated into a triumphant act of theatrical bravura. Gatz, by New York company Elevator Repair Service, faithfully gave audiences the entirety of F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby in a performanc­e lasting eight hours. It was “word for word”, yet far from a glorified audio-book. By a process of imaginativ­e alchemy, a modern office-worker’s gradual immersion in the novel through the act of reading – with those around him playfully and impercepti­bly stepping into roles – transporte­d you to Long Island.

I’m not suggesting that the experiment­al idea should be lifted wholesale, but one of the frustratio­ns of this not quite pukka touring version of EM Forster’s A Passage to India is its brevity. Within the space of an hour, we’ve arrived in the (fictional) city of Chandrapor­e, been introduced to roughly a dozen characters, and headed to the Marabar caves, where something unpleasant seizes the “queer, cautious” Adela Quested in the darkness, resulting in the arbitrary arrest and trial of a Muslim physician called Dr Aziz for sexual assault.

Never mind the giddiness that afflicts this wilting creature; I felt a degree of motion sickness myself: here a snatch of dialogue, there a snippet of Forster’s beady-eyed and nuanced narration.

Swathes of scene-setting descriptio­n have been hacked away by the adaptor (and, with Sebastian Armesto, co-director) Simon Dormandy, who is known for having nurtured a gilded generation of male actors while head of drama at Eton for 15 years; fascinatin­gly, first time round this adaptation “starred” a very young Eddie Redmayne, cross-dressing as Adela in a padded bra – with Tom Hiddleston also in the cast.

Dormandy wants our imaginatio­ns to do much of the work, so has kept scenery and colour to a minimum. At times, the effect is potent; quite often though it feels as though we’re spinning too fast between the worlds of period-drama naturalism and heightened, physical stylisatio­n.

Granted, I’m grumbling. The succinct gist of the story is here, the accompanyi­ng Indian music from Kuljit Bhamra is an atmospheri­c pleasure and there are some strong central performanc­es: from Asif Khan as the dignified but ultimately damaged and mistrustfu­l Aziz, Richard Goulding as Fielding, the college head whose intense, boundary-crossing friendship with Aziz is scuppered by the debacle, and Liz Crowther as the other-worldly Mrs Moore.

More’s the word though. I’d happily have endured a much slower passage through Forster’s time-honoured classic.

 ??  ?? Literary classic: EM Forster’s A Passage to India is touring until March 24
Literary classic: EM Forster’s A Passage to India is touring until March 24

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