Become a Member
Theatre

Review: The Comedy of Errors

December 8, 2011 11:46

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

1 min read

Shakespeare teaches us that it does not much matter how ridiculous a plot is as long as the emotions are true.

You can have identical twins (here played by Lenny Henry and Chris Jarman) who each have identical twin servants (Lucian Msamati and Daniel Poyser), and then concoct a cockamamy story about siblings being separated as children by a great storm, and then unknowingly brought back together as adults in a city where each mistaken encounter causes them, and everyone who meets them, to question their own sanity. And, after all that, you can still make the heart swell with the tenderest of reunions - if you are Shakespeare.

Dominic Cooke's modern-dress, often very funny production gets to that rapturous climax via a startling opening scene in which the above backstory is not only described, but depicted.

Henry is the most natural comic talent here - bewilderment forcing that baritone voice of his to rise to a castrato's pitch.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.