📄 Extracted Text (913 words)
From: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation®gmail.com>
To: "guardian.co.uk" <noreply®guardian.co.uk>
Cc: "Lang, Caroline" <1
Subject: Re: [From: Caroline Lang] Rich simplicity from Peter Brook
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2012 23:24:46 +0000
will be with you in spirit on sunday, though not in body„ im with my literary gurus at Harvard today„ great.
fun
On Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 6:39 PM, guardian.co.uk <[email protected]> wrote:
Caroline Lang spotted this on the guardian.co.uk site and thought you should see it.
Note from Caroline Lang:
About The Playstation I saw this evening. Will play I believe again sometime in May in London
To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to
httplAvww.guardian.co.uk/stage/2001/jan/26/theatre.artsfeatures1
Rich simplicity from Peter Brook
Le Costume
Young Vic, London
Michael Billington
Friday January 26 2001
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co. uldstage/2001/jan/26/theatre.artsfeatures1
"Cultivate simplicity," was Lamb's advice to Coleridge. It's also a good precept for a director. Over the years
Peter Brook has taken it so to heart that his focus now is on the tale rather than the teller. Yet behind the
resonant strangeness of this South African fable, jointly presented by the Young Vic and the London
international festival of theatre, you sense Brook's controlling intelligence.
The Suit, by South African writer Can Themba, was first dramatised for the Market Theatre, Johannesburg, by
Mothobi Mutloatse and Barney Simon, and it is this version that is now played in French with English
surtitles.
Set in the teeming township of Sophiatown in the 1950s, it tells of a young married couple, Philemon and
Matilda. One day Philemon is told that his wife is having an affair. He catches her in flagrante and scares off
her lover, who leaves behind his suit. Matilda's punishment is to be ever reminded of the suit, which sits with
the pair at suppertimes, is taken for Sunday walks and is fatally deployed by Philemon as a humiliating symbol
of his wife's sin.
Themba's tale has the spiky potency of a story from the Decameron: it deals with lust, penitence and a tragic
EFTA00933222
failure of forgiveness. Its theatrical power also stems from its vivid evocation of time and place. Sophiatown
itself - erased by the brutal apparatchiks of apartheid in 1955 - is as much the protagonist as the suit. It
emerges as a place of hardship where privacy is at a premium - hence the knowledge of Matilda's adultery. But
it also comes across paradoxically as a source of energy: of gossip, music, dreams and drinking in the
ubiquitous shebeens.
The wonder of Brook's production is that it conveys all this with minimal resources. It is staged on a riotously
coloured patterned carpet with a pair of coat-racks used as windows, wardrobes, doors and bus-shelters. But
Brook, reminding us that Matilda is a frustrated singer, also evokes the extrovert ebullience of township life
through music - everything from Miriam Makeba to Ella Fitzgerald. Even with only four actors, he is able to
conjure up a bustling party.
Brook's finest touch is unselfconsciously to embrace the audience. When Tanya Moodie's marvellous Matilda
joins a community club she turns to individual spectators as if they were her personal benefactors. And the
hauntingly lean Sotigui Kouyate addresses us directly in his opening sketch of Sophiatown.
The pain of the story comes across strongly both in Moodie's aching desire for forgiveness and in Hubert
Kounde's intransigent severity as her husband. The moment when he finally grasps her lifeless hand packs an
Othello-like punch. Without ever straining for effect, Brook's lustrous production affirms the unending
richness of theatrical simplicity.
• Until February 3. Box office: 020-7928 6363. Then at Warwick Arts Centre (024-7652 4524),
February 6-9. A version of this review appeared in later editions of yesterday's paper.
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