#1 out of 1
entertainment21h ago
Saint Joan review – urgency and drive in Stewart Laing’s modernist adaptation of George Bernard Shaw
- Laing’s modernist Saint Joan is shorter than the original yet maintains Shaw’s earnest themes of faith and rebellion.
- Mandipa Kabanda leads with rapid, urgent dialogue as the Maid of Orleans, matching pace with the rest of the cast.
- Ear pieces on male actors suggest Joan’s voices are heard alongside those of her peers.
- The ending juxtaposes modern protesters with Kabanda’s call for action, echoing contemporary urgency.
- The Times critic’s concern about modern commentary mirrors the production’s reflective stance, not its irony.
- Kabanda’s performance is described as tearing through dialogue with rare pace and urgency.
- Laing uses film sequences and camera angles to integrate Shaw’s unproduced film vision into the stage.
- The production is a Raw Material co-production, signaling a collaborative, contemporary approach.
- Shaw’s themes of religious conviction and ecclesiastical power remain central to the reinterpretation.
- The Guardian frames the piece as a timely, energetic exploration of Shaw’s drama.
- The stage production explicitly connects Joan’s revolt to contemporary activism.
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