"Much Ado About Nothing". Royal Shakespeare Theatre
It’s Sicily in Stratford-upon-Avon, and this week it certainly feels like it. It’s 23 degrees at 4pm. As the evening descends, the sunlight softens and grows warm. Minutes stretch uncaged across the lawns outside the theatre. The swans on the Avon make hardly a ripple in the stillness, and the bronze statue of Shakespeare, palm outstretched and polished shiny as a pope’s ring, generates an inner warmth as day gives way to dusk. On such a night as this do young men’s minds turn to love… and football. It's part of a critic’s job to go into every production with an open mind. But with this Much Ado About Nothing the RSC has been so open about Director Michael Longhurst’s concept that it’s hard not to embark on it without some preconceptions. ‘Shakespeare’s original rom-com set in the world of top-flight football and celebrity culture, where scandal-filled rivalries are the hottest new thing and lads and WAGs collide’ says the website. It sounds fun, but what’s got into the RSC? They ...