"The Cherry Orchard". Oxford Playhouse
Precisely one century ago Anton Chekhov’s final play, and greatest masterpiece, The Cherry Orchard , reached the British stage. It was a momentous and significant event in the history of this country’s theatre. And it took place right here, at the Oxford Playhouse, in a production mounted by students and professionals. How fitting it is, then, for a student production company to re-mount and re-imagine this play on the same stage. Its overriding themes, of the old giving way to the new, of modernity vanquishing tradition, and of a brutally monetised future laying waste to a more innocent, if misguided, past, feel as relevant today as they were a century ago. In his informative and beautifully-written programme notes, director Harry Brook, of An Exciting New Productions, describes his interpretation as ‘looking forward and backward with Janus-like faces’. It certainly does that, and it builds to a climax that is eye-poppingly original and simultaneously makes perfect sense. In the open