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Theatre

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Parts One and Two

Potter shines bright

July 29, 2016 09:48
Paul Thornley and Noma Dumezwani

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

It's sometimes hard not to be cynical about J. K. Rowling's success: the seven novels that sold over 450 million copies; the Hollywood franchise that launched the careers of film stars, the theme park, the HP shops, the merchandise. These days it's not just the T-shirt you buy after you've "done that". It's easy to imagine that every decision relating to the Potter world-dominating brand is a commercial one. But that's not true. In fact, Rowling is in danger of giving globalisation a good name.

Here, the decisions made by the author and her co-writers Jack Thorne and John Tiffany, who also directs, place art above spectacle. Which is not to say that there are not spectacular moments - the fight scenes feature jets of fire that streak across the stage like dragon's breath. When the plot demands travel to a different dimension, the physical world and everything in it wobbles like jelly - an extraordinary effect that will make you dizzy.

As for that cloak-swishing moment, it occurs on platform nine and three-quarters at King's Cross station. Children are about to board the Hogwart Express and, in one blink and a choreographed twirl, their clothes transform from multicoloured teen civvies to the black-caped school uniforms of the school of wizardry. It prompts the first of many gasps from the audience.

But what keeps this five-hour, two-part play moving as fast as a runaway Hogwarts Express is the new story, about which it is impossible to say much without spoiling it. Harry, Ron and Hermione are now grown-ups. Harry is head of Magical Law Enforcement, a role he finds easier than being father to his 14-year-old son, Albus.

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