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As You LIke It

As You Like It

Author: Shakepeare

Director: Peter Hall

The Peter Hall Company

Synopsis

Before he died, Sir Rowland de Boys asked Oliver, the eldest of his three sons, to see to the education of the younger two. Jacques, the middle son, was sent to university but Orlando, was kept at home, poor and uneducated. Orlando opens the play by complaining about his lot to a faithful elderly servant, Adam. Orlando says that although he was born a gentleman, he has been stripped of all status and is worse off than the animals. When he challenges Oliver about the situation, his brother becomes angry and decides to have Orlando killed by a ferocious wrestler, Charles.
Duke Senior has been usurped by his wicked younger brother, Frederick and taken refuge in the Forest of Arden with some companions. There they live 'like the old Robin Hood of England'. Rosalind still lives at court as companion to her cousin Celia, Duke Frederick’s only child.
The two stories meet when Orlando, determined to do something about his situation, decides to fight Charles the Wrestler. No one believes Orlando has any chance of winning. Rosalind and Celia join a crowd of lords and attendants to watch the fight. Orlando wins and he and Rosalind fall head over heels in love.
Matters take a turn for the worse when Duke Frederick discovers that Orlando is the son of his old enemy, Sir Rowland de Boys. Le Beau urges Orlando to leave court. Orlando flees to the Forest of Arden.
Duke Frederick turns his anger on Rosalind and orders banishes her. Celia and Rosalind decide to go into the Forest in search of Duke Senior, taking with them Frederick’s jester, Touchstone. For safety’s sake, Rosalind disguises herself as a boy and calls herself Ganymede. Celia dresses 'in poor and mean attire' and changes her name to Aliena.
Disguised as a young man - Ganymede - Rosalind goes into the Forest of Arden, where she meets Orlando again. Knowing Orlando to be in love with Rosalind, she persuades him to pretend that, though apparently a man, he/she is really Rosalind and woo her as he would his sweetheart.
To complicate matters, a shepherdess, Phebe, falls in love with Ganymede. A shepherd, Silvius loves Phebe and is heartbroken. Rosalind rejects Phebe. She tells her to treat Silvius kindly and to be thankful for his love. Touchstone the clown falls for a goat herd called Audrey, who is turn is loved by a simple countryman, William. Celia doesn’t have much to do in the forest but spends some of the time gathering cliché-ridden love poems which Orlando has written to Rosalind and pinned on trees all over Arden.
Meanwhile back at court, the enraged Duke Frederick orders Oliver de Boys to capture Orlando dead or alive. Later, in Arden, Orlando finds 'a wretched ragged man, overgrown with hair' lying asleep under an old oak tree, a poisonous snake at his throat. He frightens away the snake, which slithers off into a bush, in which same bush Orlando sees a ravenous lion crouching, ready to pounce.
Recognising the unkempt man as his hateful brother Oliver, Orlando decides to let the lion eat him. Just in time, Orlando changes his mind and saves his brother from certain death. Changed by this act of great goodness, Oliver asks Orlando for forgiveness and promises to give him his rightful inheritance. Jaques de Boys arrives in the forest with the news that Duke Frederick has met 'an old religious man' and seen the error of his ways. Repentant, Frederick restores land and wealth to Duke Senior.
The play ends happily and with many marriages ordained by Hymen, the Greek and Roman god of marriage. Rosalind marries Orlando, Celia marries the now-loving Oliver, Touchstone marries Audrey and the shepherdess, Phebe marries Silvius. All exiles leave the forest and return to court.

Joseph Millson Role

Orlando

Add in the unusually sexy Orlando of Joseph Millson, and one had an "As You Like It" with a rare and real erotic heat alongside a pulsating melancholia. Variety

Dates

13 August '03 - 30 August '03: Theatre Royal Bath

UK & US tour '03-'04

Links

Theatre Royal, Bath 

Reviews

As You Like It (reviews)

"The youth Ganymede, self-appointed amatory tutor to her own (i.e., Rosalind's) ardent suitor, Orlando, played here by the splendid and strapping Joseph Millson. "

Theatre Mania by Sandy MacDonald Nov 2003


"Thankfully, Joseph Millson does not play Orlando as a hunky dumbo: this is a rigorous, vital performance"

Wbur.org/arts by Bill Marx Nov 2003

"Joseph Millsonis the dashing Orlando. He gives a passionate performance throughout, but I was particularly taken with a moving passage he delivers concerning the frailty of his man servant when Orlando first comes upon the banished Duke and his men in the forest."

On Stage Boston by R.J. Donovan Nov 2003


 "Ms. Hall is well matched by Mr. Millson, a dashing British television star, who brings an enthusiastic, open-faced callowness to Orlando. Like Rosalind, this Orlando has already been exposed to the nastier side of human nature, in his case through his jealous, murderous older brother (Glenn Carter). He, too, boils with youthful indignation at injustice and perfidy. You believe that this Orlando is so morally overheated that he can indeed defeat a wrestler twice his size. Yet he melts at the first sign of kindness from a stranger, and you may find yourself melting with him. Orlando doesn't have Rosalind's quick wit (who does?), but Mr. Millson's achingly sincere performance makes it clear that he deserves to win her. Their first encounter is a rapturous study in ungainliness. Neither knows what to say to the other, precisely because on some gut level they know that the stakes have never been higher."

New York Times by Ben Brantley Dec 2003


The usurping Duke's court is minimally suggested, scarcely more than a frame for Joseph Millson's Orlando to defeat Charles the bully wrestler, for Rosalind and Celia to establish the closeness of their relationship before they seek freedom in the forest and for the principals to 'tangle eyes'. But this Orlando shows himself capable of passionate violence before he is put to the test; he expresses his anger against his brother's restrictions on his upbringing by pinning him furiously to the ground. Millson has the charm for a romantic hero but shows there is more to his Orlando than writing limp verse. Later he is a fit playfellow, and thus consort, for Rosalind - equally serious, equally quick-witted.

Reviews Gate by Heather Neil Aug 2003


She is also helped by Joseph Millson's Orlando, who, in place of the usual twerpish cipher, offers us a man both visibly smitten and angered by his peasant upbringing.p

The Guardian Michael Billington 2003


Add in the unusually sexy Orlando of Joseph Millson, and one had an "As You Like It" with a rare and real erotic heat alongside a pulsating melancholia.

Variety Matt Wolf Sept 2003


It is an interesting aspect of this As You Like It that its Rosalind, though declaring herself "fathom deep" in love with Orlando, actually seems happier in Celia’s company. Director Hall makes an engaging threesome of them, placing Rosalind and Joseph Millson’s Orlando in such physical proximity for their every exchange, whether raptly in each other’s faces or on their knees like Hansel and Gretel, that the magnetism is palpable — and painful.

And Millson is a terrific Orlando, not just a sighing "Signior Love" but also a rightly angry young man. Not only does the handsome actor sport the most fetchingly flopping hair since Hugh Grant’s, he also embodies the dichotomies of As You Like It, both posturing and seething with passion. When he declares, with authority as well as ardor, that "I can no longer live by thinking," we know it’s time to set the alarm clock on this idyll and get on with life in all its un-Arcadian complication.

Carolyn Clay Boston Phoenix Nov 2003

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