SOLDIERING AND SACRIFICE
. This is one of the RSC’s big hitters: five stars everywhere ,and promoted more as comedy than the romantic-chivalric classic it is, Rostand’s 19c tragic epic in hexamers, set in Franco-Spanish wars of the 17c. So, having missed the press night of this adaptation (by Simon Evans and the poet Debris Stevenson), I bought a proper ticket. Can’t miss Adrian Lester, even with the famous Cyrano false nose – and it’s always good to check how these acclaimed shows actually feel from the cheapest seats.
I can report that actually the sightlines are fine , once the framing meta-theatrical horseplay of side boxes and a theatre manager searching for Cyrano are past (all amusing enoigh).And it’s the RSC, they are all beautifully audible. So sit anywhere. Just do: for Adrian Lester is one of our great 21c theatrical giants, and holds the stage through every scene, from first swagger and banter, through formidable depths of feeling, all the way to his last words. Epic indeed.
The bones of the original story have been borrowed by countless rom-coms: Cyrano is a great warrior, great heart and poet, but his ugly nose makes him feel unlovable by women. But to help out young Christian (Levi Brown, a handsome hunk but no talker) Cyrano writes beautiful letters on his bEhalf to Roxane (Susannah Fielding), who he of course also loves at a distance. The very expression of his adoration is a balm to his spirit.
Lester is tremendous, selfconsciously self deprecating, bantering, agile in proper heroic style. He even does the best stage cartwheel since Bonnie Langford in Paddington (or Haydn Gwynne in 9 to 5, I record these with respect). He is elder- brotherly to Christian, mocks his idle commanding officer, stays silently dazzled by Roxanne but not about to show inmanly weakness. Fielding’s Roxanne is far more than he original author ever made her: funny, active, strong willed, likeable. There are laughs, and the staging has two good theatrical devices following Cyrano. One is a comically insistent small onstage band suddenly turning up at his entrances (his legend, as great warrior and poet) and the other a small child version of homself, in straw hat, an innocent who wanders through, shy but clear eyed , a heartbreaking presence in the battle scene later.
For it’s the second act that makes it (the first, to be honest, makes your mind wander a bit, and two separate couples near me actually decamped in the interval). That’s their loss; for now we see seriousness, soldiers weary and hungry under draped canvas, Cyrano writing what may be a final letter because they are ordered to draw lethal fire for strategic reasons and may die. “I cleave to the memories of landscape without enemies” sighs the heroic poet.
But Roxanne and her companions arrive, boldly, dressed as nuns with provisions. And what is gripping is the reaction of the others. Roxanne says to Christian that his beautiful words “chased me”, inspiring her journey. But when he realizes that Cyrano has gone on writing to her in his name, every single day – Christian is furious that this poetic adoration drew her into danger, and even more furious that she loves not him as a man, but the beautiful soul of the writer. The lovely irony is that like Cyrano, he dreams of being loved for his real self not “stupid bloody letters!”. So what Cyrano thought of as being selfless, Christian sees as selfish.
The guns boom; Christian’s death in his friend’s arms devastates them all. Roxanne is never disabused of her adoration for the lost lover who she thought wrote the letters. Or not until the very, very end; the final twenty minutes between her and Cyrano in a monastery garden years later are memorable; you feel the audience’s emotion breathing around you. So, having wondered a bit about all the fuss until the interval, you wonder no more.
Delfontmackintosh.co.uk, to 5 sept
rating five







