The Scotsman

Scenes from Lyceum’s most popular Christmas show

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

A CHRISTMAS CAROL

It’s perhaps the most famous of all Christmas stories, written by Charles Dickens in 1843 – at the height of Britain’s first Industrial Revolution – and published on 19 December that year. The first edition had sold out by Christmas Day, and the little book was in its 13th edition by the time Christmas 1844 came round; perhaps because, as much as any of Dickens’s full-length novels, the story offered an unforgetta­ble vision of the huge economic inequaliti­es created by rapid social and industrial change, of the sheer cruelty of a society in which wealthy individual­s took no responsibi­lity for those harsh social divisions, and of how their attitudes conflicted with the message of love and goodwill that lies at the heart of Christmas, then fast becoming the biggest family festival of the year.

The parallels with our own times, over the last 40 years, are striking, as a new informatio­n revolution has swept through our economy, and the laissez-faire ideology of institutio­nalised in difference, and of punitive attitudes to those living in poverty, has made a frightenin­g comeback. So it’s perhaps not surprising that theatre adaptation­s of A Christmas Carol have become ever more popular. Of all these versions, few have engaged more energetica­lly with Dickens’ original story than the Edinburgh Christmas Carol commission­ed by the Lyce-um Theatre last year from brilliant comedy writer and director Tony Cowniein tackling A Christmas Carol, Cownie boldly decided to deal headon with the fact that in Scotland, until the mid-20th century, Christmas really was not much of a thing, compared with New Year; indeed it only became an official public holiday in Scotland in 1958. His Scrooge, superbly played by Crawford Logan, is therefore the very epitome of Calvinist religiosit­y deployed as an excuse for absolute joylessnes­s, combined with financial stinginess; and although this new vision of Scrooge’s motivation may not match the story at every step, Cownie’s Edinburgh version – complete with castle views, a Greyfriars Bobby sub -plot and a gorgeous puppet Tiny Tim – emerged as a roaring festive success, and indeed the Lyceum’s most popular Christmas show since the company was founded in the 1960s.

In these scenes from the show, performed by seven members of the cast in a special Christmas Scotsman Session, we move from Scrooge’s original rejection of all things Christmas-related, through his first encounter with the ghost of Christmas Lang Syne, to a brief reflection on the home life of his clerk Bob Cratchit’s family–over shadowed by starvation wages and fears for the health of Tiny Tim – to a warning of the likely loneliness and lovelessne­ss of Scrooge’s own death, as his underpaid housekeepe­r cheerfully flogs off his few personal effects to a rag-and-bone man.

In the last scene, though, we catch a glimpse of how Scrooge learns that he can change the world of others by living generously rather than meanly, and also transform the quality of his own life.

 ??  ?? 0 Crawford Logan as Scrooge
0 Crawford Logan as Scrooge

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom