The Scotsman

New lease of love life

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And into this landscape of wry, funny or bitter loss step two characters who are destined to love and be loved; Tristan, the long-lost French son of the Cornish king Mark, and Yseult, the Irish princess that Mark intends to marry, but who falls passionate­ly in love with Tristan – and he with her – when he is sent to escort her back to Cornwall.

It doesn’t end well, of course. But on a stage swept with colour, sound and invention – and with the odd moment of Wagner playing from an old electric radiogram on stage – Rice’s cast of 12 succeed brilliantl­y in the fiercely difficult job of combining elements of modern reflection and sendup with a true respect for the romantic heart of the story.

This perfect balance of tragedy and comedy is perhaps best reflected in Niall Ashdown’s funny and heartbreak­ing performanc­e as Yseult’s middleaged serving-woman Brangian, constantly rushing to get back into character after a tour of duty in the band, or as a rope-worker on one of the show’s many moments of flight.

Yet if, elsewhere, the comedy is sometimes a shade self-conscious and long-drawn out, these are only momentary missteps in a fantastic and beautifull­y-judged spectacle, which features three fine central performanc­es from Dominic Marsh, Hannah Vassallo and Mike Shepherd, an outrageous­ly heartbreak­ing and beautiful final scene, and a sense of theatre so passionate that it has the audience at the Citizens’ cheering the Kneehigh company to the echo, like Cornish cousins finally come home.

 ??  ?? Dominic Marsh and Hannah Vassallo are in fine form as the central characters of star-crossed lovers Tristan and Yseult
Dominic Marsh and Hannah Vassallo are in fine form as the central characters of star-crossed lovers Tristan and Yseult

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