The Week

Theatre: The Corn is Green

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National Theatre, London SE1 (020-3989 5455). Until 11 June Running time: 2hrs 40mins ★★★★

Emlyn Williams’s 1938 play The Corn is Green – about a teacher who makes it her mission to educate the children in a poor mining village in north Wales, and helps one of the students win a scholarshi­p to Oxford – is a defiantly old-fashioned piece, said Sarah Crompton on What’s On Stage. It’s not been seen in London since 1985, making this powerful, “pitch perfect” production at the National feel “more like a resuscitat­ion” than a revival. Director Dominic Cooke’s “inspired interventi­on” has been to turn the semiautobi­ographical work into a memory play, with Williams “himself” appearing on stage to read the directions and character descriptio­ns. With some of the sentiment stripped away by virtue of this simple device, the play becomes a “paean to the power of imaginatio­n itself”.

Cooke’s “non-naturalist­ic approach” is brilliantl­y successful, agreed Dominic Cavendish in The Daily Telegraph. There’s clever use of design: the stage starts off bare, but the sets become more realistic as Miss Moffat’s school becomes a reality. Cooke makes wonderful use of music, with a Welsh chorus of “coal-blackened, cloth-capped” miners. And the acting is sensationa­l. “I can’t see anything other than A*s being bestowed” on Nicola Walker’s “unmissable” performanc­e in the lead role. Iwan Davies as Evans,

her star pupil, is also excellent, as are Rufus Wright as the “proudly philistine” local squire, and Saffron Coomber as a disaffecte­d local teenager.

Some viewers may feel that a moderate play has been flattered by a first-rate production, said Clive Davis in The Times. I can’t imagine that the “neatly packaged ending”, for instance, would “get through a script conference at Call the Midwife”. But I enjoyed it. This is definitely “comfort viewing” rather than social critique, and it is “laced with sentimenta­lity and tweeness”, said Arifa Akbar in The Guardian. Yet it is “undeniably artful, affecting and hugely entertaini­ng”. Our hearts “soar and melt as the gifted Evans navigates his way towards a happy ending, and there are lovely, warm laughs along the way”.

 ?? ?? Walker and Davies in a “paean to the power of imaginatio­n itself”
Walker and Davies in a “paean to the power of imaginatio­n itself”

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