Categories: Reviews

Much Ado About Nothing

 Ring the bells and make much ado about this Much Ado because nothing is better than a pun-filled night of cruel deeds, fake death and unrequited lust.

 Presented by: Bell Shakespeare Venue: Playhouse, the Arts Centre, Melbourne Friday, 10 June 2011
Ring the bells and make much ado about this Much Ado because nothing is better than a pun-filled night of cruel deeds, fake death and unrequited lust.
Big Willy loved a double meaning and if he’d been in London in the 1960s, I’m sure he would have moonlighted as a Carry On writer. If you’ve ever thought that the old Bill is a bit stuffy, Bell Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing will set you straight, and leave you suitably bent.
Much Ado is one of the comedies. It’s the one where the reluctant lovers Benedick (Toby Schmitz) and Betrice (Blazey Best) are duped into fancying the hell out of each other, as schmaltzy lovers Claudio (Sean Hawkins) and Hero (Alexandra Fisher) nearly break up when a really mean deception goes to plan. It’s about ladies sighing no more because men are deceivers ever and reminds us that a hey nonny nonny will always feel better than a sulk.
The cast mix of experienced and less experienced actors creates a fresh and authentic balance of endless energy that will ensure that anyone not in love with Shakespeare will be by the final applause.
Schmitz lets the audience be Bendick’s best friend with soliloquies that make you want to share a flagon of cider with him and talk all night, and he’s matched by Best’s firey and compassionate Beatrice.  Bell Shakespeare favourites Arky Michael and Robert Alexander delight every moment they are on stage, while Sean O’Shea’s Don John re-defines the nasty jealous uncle and Max Gilles’s malaproping Dogberry shows just how much life is left in the old dog and ensures that auspicious persons will always suspect his age and place.
Then there’s Stephen Curtis’s design, which is part-Fellini, part-Brunswick-end-of-Lygon-Street and leaves you wanting to hug your lover from the back of a Vespa before an endless night of home made antipasto, Chianti and exhausting passion. Or at least re-embrace high-waisted pants, hair curlers and swirly net petticoats.
Directed by John Bell, this Much Ado About Nothing is an utter joy that brings every joke and every dilemma and tear out of this complex and very funny story. It left me wanting more and I think that I want “Press me to death with wit” on my gravestone. Until 25 June, 2011 bellshakespeare.com.au 

Anne-Marie Peard

Anne-Marie spent many years working with amazing artists at arts festivals all over Australia. She's been a freelance arts writer for the last 10 years and teaches journalism at Monash University.

Share
Published by
Anne-Marie Peard

Recent Posts

Full Cast announced for Disney’s HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL

Hope Mill Theatre and Chris Harper Productions in association with Lowry are delighted to announce…

12 hours ago

Victorian Opera presents The Coronation of Poppea

Drugs, guns and burning lust. Victorian Opera’s striking new production of The Coronation of Poppea…

13 hours ago

Kat Stewart and director Sarah Goodes reunite for gripping Australian drama

One of Australia’s most acclaimed directors, Sarah Goodes (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Julia, The…

21 hours ago

Interview with Gary Abrahams

Fresh from presenting Yentl in London and now celebrating the success of Eurydice at forty…

2 days ago

The Tony Awards Are Not About Numbers, They Are About The Story Broadway Wants To Tell

The Tony Awards are never just about who gave the best performance or which production…

2 days ago

30 years in the making, Opera Australia’s milestone tour of a Mozart masterpiece: Don Giovanni

Marking three decades of Opera Australia’s national touring program, the 2026 tour of Michael Gow’s…

2 days ago