Thursday, April 3, 2014

Reviews: A Study in Scarlet @ Southwark Playhouse

A Study in Scarlet
Southwark Playhouse, March 21, 2014

            Defying the contemporary trend of updating Sherlock Holmes in television shows such as ‘Sherlock’ and ‘Elementary’, Tacit Theatre delivers Holmes’ first adventure in Doyle’s original setting of Victorian London. With a cast of just seven actors, Director Nicholas Thompson, uses double casting as a way to tell the two stories going on, of both Holmes’ investigation as well as the events leading to murder.
            A Study in Scarlet is the title of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s first Sherlock Holmes novel. Personally unfamiliar with the novel, I can’t say how close the stage adaptation follows the text, but it is easy to understand without the context of the novel. The play begins with two pioneers in the US, a dying father and daughter, saved by a traveling group of Mormons on their way to Utah whose only condition is that these two must join their new religion. Then we are quickly transported to London, where Watson meets Holmes for the first time, and is quickly dragged along to help with the murder investigation of an American man. Over the course of the play we see the story of the young girl and her father play out in this Mormon community, while also watching as Holmes and Watson work to solve the murder of two men from the aforementioned community in Utah.
            We first meet Philip Benjamin as a dust covered, smooth tongued Elder Drebber, leading a community of ‘Latter-day Saints,’ or Mormons. His eyes are wide and alert, and his vocal pattern carries a distinct drawl, oddly mechanical with a false air of warmth within it. Then in the next scene, Benjamin appears as the errant ‘Consulting Detective,’ Sherlock Holmes. With a scarlet neck-tie, flourishing gestures and a crisp English accent, he is able to differentiate between his two roles perfectly. Also surprising us with his skillful playing of the violin as Holmes, while also adding to the dramatic tension in a number of moments.
            Rhys King was also another actor displaying two very different characters in his role as the deeply unsettling Elder Drebson, son of Elder Drebber, and then as the bumbling Detective Gregson. Our first impression of King is that of the wild-eye, trigger-happy Elder Drebson, suspicious of anyone outside of his immediate circle. Later he appears as the confused detective who, funnily enough, is investigating the murder of his other Drebson. It is a relief to see King as the Detective after seeing him as Drebson, who’s wide and roving eyes matched with twitching physicality are very unsettling in the small space of Southwark’s aptly named ‘Little’.

            This was very much an ensemble piece though, with every actor playing an instrument, even if it is just the Triangle by Edward Cartwright as Watson. Each actor plays multiple roles, keeping the story clear with every new character very distinct in voice and mannerisms. The design is that of a beautiful Victorian House by Katherine Heath, who also made apparent the distinct differences between dusty American Pioneers and stiff Victorian Londoners within the design of the costumes. Theatre’s production of A Study in Scarlet at Southwark Playhouse offers audiences a classic retelling of Sherlock’s first adventure in the original setting with just as much flare as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself.

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