The Week

Theatre: Dr Semmelweis

Bristol Old Vic (0117-987 7877). Until 19 February Running time: 2hrs 40mins

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In the spring, Mark Rylance will be reprising his role in Jez Butterwort­h’s Jerusalem, said Dominic Cavendish in The Daily Telegraph – but first he offers a “mesmerisin­g turn” in a “compelling” new drama at the Bristol Old Vic. Dr

Semmelweis is about the 19th century Hungarian physician who “realised the life-saving value of hand hygiene, yet was treated like dirt” by the medical establishm­ent. The piece is co-written by Rylance and playwright Stephen Brown; and although it was conceived prepandemi­c, it could “hardly have its finger more on the jittery pulse of our virus-ravaged age” – showing vividly how “human failings, from prejudice to egotism, can thwart medical progress”.

Rylance is sensationa­lly good, said Quentin Letts in The Sunday Times. He can “spin on a penny, switching from intensity to gurgling merriment”; every “vocal check makes you watch him only more closely”. In his hands, Semmelweis’s story becomes a “tragedy of almost Shakespear­ean proportion­s”, said Arifa Akbar in The Guardian – the diffident hero undone by his “unbending sense of right”. Director Tom Morris stages the play with a “magnificen­t”, almost dance-like fluidity, using expression­ist music and movement to take us inside Semmelweis’s mind. And there’s a chorus of ghostly dancers – the women he’s been unable to save. Adrian Sutton’s music is “spellbindi­ng”, said Patrick Marmion in The Daily Mail. Reminiscen­t of Schubert’s

Death And The Maiden, it’s played live by a string quartet “with urgency and passion”.

Overall, though, this is a good play, not a great one, said Alice Saville in the FT – atmospheri­c but uneven, and “bordering on the repetitive”. For instance, we’re frequently told that the women on wards run by doctors are three times as likely to die as those on wards run by midwives. Yet we “never meet one of these midwives, and the lone female voice of Nurse Müller (Jackie Clune) is underwritt­en as a kind of plucky everywoman”. Still, it is “undeniably a good yarn”, and beautifull­y acted.

 ?? ?? Rylance (centre) in a “tragedy of almost Shakespear­ean proportion­s”
Rylance (centre) in a “tragedy of almost Shakespear­ean proportion­s”

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