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The Jewish Chronicle

Review: A View From The Bridge

Jealousy tale grips so tight

February 12, 2009 11:08
Ken Stott (second from left) leads the cast in Arthur Miller’s drama A View From The Bridge

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

1 min read

The headlines about this terrific production of Arthur Miller’s tragedy will inevitably focus on Ken Stott, who grips the jealous essence of New York docker Eddie Carbone with the tenacity of a bull terrier and, like his character, allows no other emotion to get through.

Sleeves rolled up, and with a rolling gait, Stott’s bear-like Eddie stalks his niece Catherine (Hayley Atwell) with a love that is something much more than paternal.

“Sometimes you talk like I’m a crazy man,” barks Eddie at his long-suffering, sexually ignored wife Beatrice, superbly underplayed with heartbreaking stoicism by American actress Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio.

She has cause to talk like that. Since the illegal arrival of Sicilian brothers Rodolfo (Harry Lloyd) and Marco (Gerard Monaco) from the old country, Eddie is subsumed by a murderous, obsessive rage at the public displays of affection between Catherine and the playful Rudolfo.