Sunday 10 October 2021

Brilliant stage finale for Hilary Mantel's Thomas Cromwell trilogy with Mirror & the Light at the Gielgud theatre

The Mirror and the Light Gielgud Theatre This production of the Mirror and the Light represents a brilliant final part of the trilogy of plays tracking the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell. This one has been a while in arriving, coming seven years, after the dramatisation of the first two books Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies. This time the star of those plays, Ben Miles plus director Jeremy Herrin have collaborated with writer, Hilary Mantel, to bring this production to the stage. Miles and Mantel have done a fine job, producing a screen play that reduces down the 883 page book to a tight stage narrative. The Mirror and the Light brings the Cromwell period to a close, whilst seeking to tie up some of the loose ends of the first two books. Notably, Miles and Mantell continue to include a lot of humour in the production, a clear difference to the TV depictions. Nathaniel Parkinson ,as King Henry, is excellent as the ebuncular monarch, at times, leading the court in merriment but who can change in an instant to a troubled, violent despot, dispatching people at will. The rising in the north, the Pilgrammage of Grace, is put down brutallly, after inital indications of concessions. At the time, Cromwell is noted by the King to be the most unpopular person in the realm -interesting, given the play was in production, when Dominic Cummings was fulfilling a similar modern day role. Ben Miles, as Cromwell, holds the whole thing together, with his powerful performance. A man troubled by the past, with the ghost of his father Walter (Liam Smith) making thuggish appearances. The ghost of Cardinal Wolsey (Tony Turner) makes for lighter contributions - " Dominus vobiscum - just passing through." Class is never far from the surface, with the nobles constantly resentful that Cromwell, the son of a blacksmith and Wolsey, the son of a butcher, should have risen to the highest office. This excellent production was illuminated by numerous outstanding performances, such as Melissa Allen as Mary Tudor and Nick Woodeson, as the diminuitive but constantly aggressive Duke of Norfolk. The booming Duke of Suffolk (Nicholas Boulton) is a constannt presence. There is quite a lot of doubling up on characters, with Matthew Pidgeon particularly outstanding as both the debonair Spanish ambassador Eustache Chapuys and the bitter and threatening Bishop in Winchester, Stephen Gardiner. One that doesn't work so well is having the same actress, Olivia Marcus, playing Queens Jane Seymour and Katherine Howard. The depiction if the two characters is similar, yet history suggests they were very different - almost opposites. Though, maybe a subtler point is being made! Overall, this is a splendid final part of the trilogy of plays. A great adaptation, brought to life by some extraordinary performances. High marks for Miles, Mantel, Herrin and all the cast. The question for Mantel is what now after Cromwell? * booking till 23 January

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