Taming the Shrew is not enough, says Griselda Heppel. There has to be chemistry too.
When did
you last see a production of The Taming
of the Shrew? Not recently, I’ll bet. A comedy whose title alone always made
it tricky to negotiate has arguably no place at all in today’s postfeminist world.
If so, we are the poorer for it. Shakespeare is Shakespeare after all, and to
consign any work of his to oblivion is a huge loss.
Which is
why I’m delighted that the play forms part of the RSC’S current season and have
lost no time in seeing it. Admiring the company’s courage in tackling something
so politically incorrect, I wondered how they’d get round the problem.
Easy: reverse
the roles. Make Italy a collection of cities ruled by matriarchs, with
Petruchia wooing Baptista’s sullen son Katherine (I guess Katherino just
doesn’t work), while Grumia and Hortensia vie with each other over the hand of
Katherine’s charming younger brother, Bianco. As an ironic take on the
patriarchy, it works brilliantly. More, by seeing so many powerful women on
stage with only a brace of men, the paucity of female parts in plays by
Shakespeare – as with countless other dramatists – is brought home in a way
that never struck me before. I mean, I knew the imbalance was bad… but not that
bad. The acting was extremely good, with much hilarity generated by this Vice
Versa scheme, particularly in the case of the delicate, long-haired, pampered
Bianco being fought over by his two lusty female suitors. The blatant sexism of
the set up didn’t matter a bit anymore because, well, the boot was on the other
foot, wasn’t it?
And yet.
I’ve
always had a soft spot for The Taming of
the Shrew. Some decades ago (ha, I’m not saying how many), I found myself
on a school outing to the Young Vic, where I fell head over heels for Jim
Dale’s mischievous Petruchio. The energy, wit and sheer magic of the play blew
me away; I had no idea Shakespeare could be this much fun. Yes, Petruchio
behaved abominably, but his sparring with Jane Lapotaire’s Katherine generated
a chemistry that brought them together in what, at the time, felt a perfectly
possible meeting of minds. The text doesn’t explicitly set Katherine up as an
equal – in fact, her last speech does anything but – yet the clues are there.
From the start she is the only character able to match Petruchio’s wit, giving
back killer line for killer line as he tries – and fails – to trip her up. Hers
is a much cleverer and more interesting personality than that of her insipid
sister, Bianca, and if all Shakespeare was concerned about was keeping women in
their place, why would he have bothered with Katherine’s character at all?
And this
is where the current Stratford production misses the point. So important is the
idea that the male Katherine suffer total submission to the female Petruchia,
as a faithful reversal of the supposed norm, that Katherine is never allowed to
take Petruchia on in any way. No banter. No surface compliance while clearly
running rings round her tyrannical wife. No mischievous spark in his eye that
shows that he, too, can play the game; heavens, the poor chap is never allowed
to raise his eyes from the ground in the whole play. Any hope of creating a
genuine understanding between the two, let alone affection, is lost. At the
end, Petruchia has achieved the enormous prize of an abject, characterless
slave to do her bidding, not a desirable, feisty husband who is her
intellectual equal. Chemistry? About as much as between a rattle snake and a, um, shrew.
Still,
it’s an original idea and a rollicking production and something had to be done
to keep The Taming of the Shrew
alive. Go and judge for yourself. You have till the end of August in Stratford,
then it’s on tour, plus a live cinema broadcast on 5 June.
Find out more about Griselda Heppel here:
Comments
I've heard great things about the RSC's current As You Like It, Bill, so hopefully you'll be in for a brilliant evening.