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Theatre

It's murder - especially for the audience

April 11, 2012 13:10
Eve Best and Tom Bateman in a rare, non-violent moment in the grisly Jacobean tragedy

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

1 min read

If, like me, your reflex response to watching a character being strangled to death is to hold your breath until it is all over, then, like me, you are likely to have turned a shade of blue by the time Eve Best's likeable Duchess of Malfi meets her end.

In John Webster's 1613 Jacobean tragedy, the duchess falls for a dashing courtier, Antonio (Tom Bateman), who is well beneath her social status. The affair so offends her brothers - particularly the deranged Ferdinand (Harry Lloyd) - that she is made to suffer in ways that are both cruel and unusual, Webster's point being that the punishment does not fit the "crime".

Ferdinand first has her incarcerated in a dungeon, then transported to a lunatic asylum so that her misery is serenaded by the tormented cries of the insane.

The maddest moment of all comes when she is shown the hanging, bloody bodies of her young son and his father. They are later revealed to be wax effigies, a ruse that confirms her tormentor to be a nutter of such barking proportions that even the murderous mercenary Bosola feels squeamish at his unremitting cruelty.