Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
August 7, 2008
Ended: 
November 8, 2008
Country: 
Canada
State: 
Ontario
City: 
Stratford
Company/Producers: 
Stratford Shakespeare Festival
Theater Type: 
International; Festival
Theater: 
Stratford Shakespeare Festival - Festival Theater
Theater Address: 
55 Queen Street
Phone: 
800-567-1600
Genre: 
comedy
Author: 
George Bernard Shaw
Director: 
Des McAnuff
Review: 

Just as the disgruntled Canadian traditionalist critics were attacking Stratford's new artistic director, Des McAnuff, as a musical-comedy director unqualified in classical drama, he opened a splendid Caesar and Cleopatra for this season's final new production. It's not so often produced because Caesar and Cleopatra is long, elaborate, and expensive; and Shaw plays are fairly rare in this "Shakespeare Festival" repertory. But, headed by a towering performance by Canada's top-ranked classical actor, 78 year-old Christopher Plummer, and entirely deftly directed by McAnuff, it wrapped up an ambitious season with prestige to spare.

McAnuff's Caesar and Cleopatra is hardly flawless, but it plays with clarity and enough energy to seem shorter and less talky than it is (there are some judicious cuts); and it is the kind of old-fashioned, opulent classical drama that Stratford has been the leading theater for in this hemisphere. Robert Brill's sets are more suggestive than explicit but sufficiently elegant when they need to be; and Paul Tazewell's costumes are luxurious-looking enough to suggest Cleopatra's fabled extravagance, especially as gorgeously lighted by Robert Thomson.

Nikki M. James is a lovely Cleopatra but neither a queenly nor a dazzling one. She delivers the lines clearly but fills the role barely adequately.
I still think the underrated 1946 film performance by peerlessly beautiful Vivien Leigh develops Cleopatra from pixyish girl to formidable woman with incomparable skill. But Plummer not only matches Claude Rains' wry wit in that film but also provides a richly nuanced portrait of a commanding warrior, prescient and cynical philosopher, aged sensualist and sadly declining hero. It is an immense performance.

The large, strong supporting cast includes several standout achievements. Peter Donaldson makes Caesar's gruff, fiercely loyal, chief officer Rufio a magnetic character worth a play of his own. Steven Sutcliffe is an amusing Britannus, Caesar's Briton slave whom Shaw invented to get in his usual mockery of pompous Englishmen. But Sutcliffe really rises to Britannus' usually perfunctory heroic fighting moments and is truly touching in his faithful adoration of Caesar.

Diane D'Aquila makes the forceful Ftateeta, a more believable person than the cartoon-character we usually see as Cleopatra's nurse.

With consummate skill, director McAnuff realizes the sweep and poetry and grandeur of Shaw's play -- as epic as, but more popularly appealing than, his greater Saint Joan. It's a triumphant ending for McAnuff's controversial but never dull first season.

Cast: 
Dalal Badr, Wayne Best, David Collins, Diane D'Aquila, Aiden deSalaiz, Peter Donaldson. Paul Dunn, Jesse Aaron Dwyre, Alana Hawley, Nikki M. James, Daniel Jewlal, Melanie Keller, Ian Lake, Roy Lewis, Gordon S. Miller, Michelle Montieth, Azeem Nathoo, Trent Pardy, Gareth Potter, Christopher Plummer, Andre Sills, Stacy Steadman, Timothy D. Stickney, Steven Sutcliffe, Brian Tree, John Vickery, Sophia Walker, Douglas Williams.
Technical: 
Set: Robert Brill; Costumes: Paul Tazewell; Lighting: Robert Thomson; Music: Rick Fox; Sound: Jim Neil; Fight Dir: Steve Rankin
Miscellaneous: 
Before details of Stratford's 2009 season were announced, news of two contracted musicals excited some of my expectations and infuriated other critics: despite last spring's announcement that musicals belonged in the smaller Avon Theater and Shakespeare in the great Festival Theater, a 2009 revival of <I>West Side Story</I> is now scheduled for the Festival Theater; and McAnuff will direct <I>A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum</I> at the Avon. The stated rationale that both are closely related to Shakespeare is iffy for <I>Forum.</I> And Stratford already produced a first-rate <I>West Side Story</I> in 1999. How about <I>I Hate Hamlet?</I> <P>Shortly following <I>Caesar & Cleopatra's</I> opening came more details of Des McAnuff's planned 2009 season, including a typical stroke of "chutzpah": the Shakespeare play McAnuff will direct next year is the perilous tragedy so feared as unmanageable that theater-folk won't pronounce its title; they call it "The Scottish Play."
Critic: 
Herbert M. Simpson
Date Reviewed: 
September 2008