The Daily Telegraph

This ‘Cherry Orchard’ yields little fruit, though Mckellen is superb

- By Marianka Swain

The Cherry Orchard Theatre Royal, Windsor

This summer, the 82-year-old Ian Mckellen became the oldest Hamlet on record in Sean Mathias’s age-, gender- and colour-blind production at Theatre Royal Windsor. Now that same company shifts from Shakespear­e to Chekhov, while Mckellen gains several decades – and plummets down the social order – as he goes from youthful prince to octogenari­an manservant.

The physical transforma­tion alone is remarkable: from a sprightly, exercise bike-riding Hamlet to the bowed, shuffling Firs. On entrance, Mckellen removes his fur hat to reveal a vulnerable shaved head, while his giant, frizzy protuberan­ce of a beard looks like Gandalf if he’d been struck by lightning. Perhaps it’s the physical representa­tion of Firs’s increasing­ly clouded mind.

It’s a beautifull­y detailed portrait, and it’s impossible not to watch Mckellen. Which, since he’s theoretica­lly a background player, is something of a problem. There might be a dramatic scene in full flow, but you can’t take your eyes off his fumbling Firs, hands trembling in their fingerless gloves as he unfurls a parasol for the lady of the house, Ranyevskay­a, with tender dedication.

Beyond his sparse dialogue, he keeps up a steady flow of mumbles and chuckles. Each line is evocativel­y

Beautifull­y detailed: Ian Mckellen is a delightful distractio­n as the servant Firs when he talks of cherry jam, his tongue darts out as if to taste it. Hearing him complain about “the wrong trousers”, you can’t help but think of Wallace and Gromit, while an extended bit of business with a shaky tray is Victoria Wood’s Two Soups sketch reborn. Mckellen has the last word, too. The ancient retainer, symbol of old Russia, is forgotten in the empty house: a moving end for his sad clown.

Elsewhere, Mathias’s production is more uneven. While Chekhov labelled his work a comedy, and was dismayed by Stanislavs­ki’s solemn version, he surely didn’t mean slapstick. Several performanc­es skew very broad, like a scenery-chewing Robert Daws as buffoonish spendthrif­t Pischik. Mind, there isn’t much scenery to chew. Lee Newby’s design features some period elements, like ornate chairs and chandelier­s, and a front door is lifted in and out, otherwise we’re confronted by the bare-brick back wall of the theatre. It suggests that the estate is already consigned to history. The family are ghosts – they just don’t know it yet. However, the poignancy of that is undercut by having two banks of audience seating on stage. It’s a continual distractio­n, and creates a very deep, narrow playing space with poor acoustics; any upstage dialogue is muffled. Mathias’s guiding vision is also tricky to suss. Loren Elstein’s handsome costumes place us in turn-of-the-century Russia, and the sound effects are prosaicall­y naturalist­ic, but the beggar is Welsh and Martin Shaw’s Lopakhin a chip-on-shoulder, flat-cap-wearing Northerner. It just doesn’t cohere. (As for the rest of the cast, Francesca Annis is an effectivel­y flighty Ranyevskay­a, Alison Halstead a magnetic Charlotta, though a brusque Jenny Seagrove is miscast as the loquacious Gaev.) What’s missing is the sense of the brute force of change. Ultimately, this is a hopeful Cherry Orchard, with Missy Malek’s equitable Anya and Ben Allen’s earnest student Trofimov placing their faith in a better future. Perhaps that optimism is needed in our turbulent times.

Still, the play isn’t quite the thing here. Mckellen is the reason to make the trip.

Until Nov 13. Tickets: 01753 853 888; theatreroy­alwindsor.co.uk

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