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Theatre

Review: Jonathan Pryce's King Lear

September 13, 2012 10:37
Commanding: Pryce as Lear

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

Did Lear sexually abuse his daughters? In Michael Attenborough’s austere new Shakespeare production, with a splendidly bearded Jonathan Pryce in the title role, there is more than a hint of something dark and inappropriate in Lear’s family history. You only get glimpses — when Lear lasciviously kisses Zoe Waites’s ruthless Goneril on the mouth, and when he stands indecently close to Jenny Jules’s neurotic Regan — but the idea hangs in the air and suggests that there is good reason behind the daughters’ callous emasculation of their father.

It also sheds light on why Phoebe Fox’s cool and better adjusted Cordelia (no hint of an abusive past around her) was the apple of Lear’s eye until, unlike her sisters, she refuses to heap meaningless praise on the King in order to win her third of his estate.

Yet this psychological insight into the strange behaviour of a monarch and the dodgy behaviour of his two eldest daughters, does not inform the evening as it might.

There is no way of knowing the origin of an idea seen in a play. But here it comes across as if Pryce has come up with a powerful notion that illuminates Lear’s past, but one which Attenborough fails to thread through the play’s entire three hours.