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London:
Olivier Theatre |
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Candide: Original Broadway Cast Recording (1991)
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Suggested reading:
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...
Like virtually every
other major production before it, the Royal National Theatres Candide has
undergone considerable alteration. One of the great flawed Broadway musicals, the show has
been endlessly revised since its premier in 1956. Along the way it has been
everything from an almost-vaudeville (in Hal Princes 1973 off-Broadway incarnation)
to a satirical opera, an approach which reached its apotheosis in Jonathan Millers
1988 Scottish Opera production.
The chief target of
Voltaires satire is the theory of the 18th Century philosopher Leibniz that
"all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds." Many of the
works observations are as relevant today as ever. Voltaire mocks the way in
which war and greed are apparently accepted as inevitable elements of a civilised
society. In Candides - and our - world all soldiers are heroes (as long as
they are on your side), the established church is hypocritical and romantic love brings
with it the threat of fatal disease. In 1956, composer Leonard Bernstein and the
shows original book writer, Lillian Hellman, were also attacking the empty
nationalism of the Eisenhower years, set against a backdrop of McCarthyism, blacklists and
witch hunts.
For this new version, director John Caird has made significant changes
to Hugh Wheelers book, itself a revision first employed in Princes 1973
production, and these have resulted in two major improvements. First, the songs seem to
spring from the text far more directly than before, thus making the evening more coherent
and satisfying on a purely dramatic level. Secondly, in incorporating more of Voltaire
into the libretto, Caird renders the contrast between the authors skepticism and the
essential warmth of much of Bernsteins music all the more striking. This serves to
further point up the shows central debate between the opposing philosophies of
pessimism and optimism.
The production benefits greatly from a fine performance by Simon
Russell Beale as both Voltaire and the philosopher - and Candides tutor -
Pangloss. The latters philosophy, that every event, however disastrous it may
appear, always turns out for the best in the end,
is countered by Denis Quilleys streetsweeper, Martin, who insists just as blindly
that human beings are essentially malevolent creatures and that whatever can go wrong will
go wrong. Ultimately, Candides adventures seem to give credence to both
theories and to illustrate Voltaires point that there is no one single ideology by
which we should live, no one perfect solution to lifes problems. Rather, it is
better to get on with the business of living and do what one can - in the words of the
final number, to Make Our Garden Grow.
Cairds production, designed by John Napier, is admirably slick
and moves with an almost cinematic fluidity. Bruce Coughlins new orchestrations are
most elegant, the difficult music is uniformly well sung and the choral sections
particularly haunting. Daniel Evans is charming as the perennially innocent Candide.
Alex Kellys Cunegonde is suitably coquettish at the outset, displays increasingly
desperate powers of manipulation and self justification as the obstacles pile up, and is
ultimately touching as she finds a kind of redemption at the plays end. Beverley
Kleins Old Woman, forever doomed to suffer the indignity and discomfort of
possessing only one buttock, provides some of the funniest and most touching moments of
the evening.
Candide is, perhaps, doomed to never quite work. Some of the songs
still seem to hold up the frantic pace of the plot and, for all its momentum, there are
occasional longeurs. However, the brilliance of Bernsteins glittering score
has never been in doubt and this latest incarnation sets it off at least as well as any
other. In addition, by incorporating more of Voltaires text than ever before,
John Cairds witty and exhilarating production comes closest to offering a coherent
version of the books philosophical debate. In the Nationals new staging
we may have the best of all possible versions of a show which, for all its slightly
blemished glory, continues to challenge and fascinate audiences over 30 years after its
first production.
- Mark Jennett