EXIT THE KING

The Court Theatre, Bernard Street, Addington, Christchurch

17/10/2015 - 07/11/2015

Production Details



Ionesco’s darkly hilarious play makes fun of all the things that tragedy usually takes seriously.  

For 400 years King Berenger conquered his enemies, building a vast kingdom with millions of subjects. He even controlled the weather. But Father Time catches up with everyone.

Now his kingdom is crumbling, his vast armies have gone, all that is left is less than a thousand elderly subjects. Even the palace washing machine has been pawned.

In Berenger’s collapsing world there is no future in the future. His Royal Highness must bow to Father Time, but he is having none of it.

Exit the King is Eugène Ionesco’s brilliantly disagreeable absurdist comedy that pokes fun at mortality. It was written at a time when the writer was facing his own imminent demise after bouts of serious illness. “This play is an attempt at an apprenticeship in dying,” he once said to French literary critic Claude Bonnefoy.

Berenger is Ionesco’s Everyman and features in several of his plays. Unlike Berenger, whose impending death in Exit the King comes as no surprise to anyone except himself, Ionesco survived another 32 years after writing the play and passed away peacefully in 1994 during an afternoon nap. During his lifetime he established himself as a writer at the forefront of avant-garde theatre, referred to as the “Shakespeare of the Absurd”.

The Court Theatre’s Artistic Director Ross Gumbley prefers to view Exit the King as a play about life: “Ionesco’s plays are full of extraordinary things and Exit the King is no exception. At face value it is a play about death and how we shy away from confronting it, until, of course, we have to.  It is really a play about life.”

The Court’s adaptation of Ionesco’s 1962 script was penned by director Neil Armfield and Academy Award winning actor Geoffrey Rush, and opened in Sydney in 2007. For the first time since its 1968 première Exit the King returned to Broadway in 2009 with Geoffrey Rush in the lead role. This translation of Ionesco‘s classic absurdist comedy has gone on to challenge, intrigue and engage audiences worldwide.

On the Tonkin and Taylor main stage at
The Court Theatre
17 October – 7 November 2015
Show Times:
Opening Night: 7:30pm Saturday 17 October
Forum: 6.30pm, Monday 19 October, after show with cast and crew
Matinee: Saturday 31 October
6.30pm, Monday & Thursday
7.30pm, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday & Saturday 
To Book:
phone 03 963 0870 or visit www.courttheatre.org.nz  
Tickets $57-$23

Exit the King is presented with the support of Pub Charity 



Theatre ,


Promising but hangs back from the precipice

Review by Erin Harrington 18th Oct 2015

Long live the King – but not for too much longer. Ross Gumbley’s production of French-Romanian author Eugène Ionesco’s absurdist play Exit the King, written in 1962 and translated sharply in 2007 by Geoffrey Rush and Neil Armfield, is a comic extended death scene.

It asks us to ruminate on the inevitability of our own mortality: the end will come for the King by the end of the play whether he likes it or not, just as it will one day come for us. While this reads as grim there is a sense of optimism about the work, for it is not just about how to die well, but how to acknowledge the beauty of being alive.

In the other plays in Ionesco’s ‘Berenger Cycle’ (The Killer, Rhinoceros and A Stroll in the Air), recurring character Berenger is a hapless, naïve everyman, but in Exit the King he is rendered as King Berenger the First (William Walker, channelling King Lear via Roald Dahl): a centuries-old monarch who presides over a once-mighty empire that is literally shrinking, cracking and crumbling away around him. From that, take what satire you will.

His first wife, the sharp-tongued and exasperated Queen Marguerite (the magnificently arch Carmel McGlone), informs him that today, finally, is his long-overdue day to die – something he’s been irresponsibility putting off, given the giddy distractions of being alive.

His second wife, the young Queen Marie (Lauren Gibson), is inconsolable at the thought of losing her husband, for she defines herself by his affections. And the King’s oily Doctor-slash-astrologer-slash-executioner (Steven Ray) will stick things out until he’s rendered obsolete.

A harried maid, Juliette (Kim Garrett), has the Sisyphean task of trying to keep the household running, even as it flakes away around her. All that’s left of the King’s massive army is a single Guard (Tom Trevella, looking like he’s been stranded after Showbiz Christchurch’s production of Spamalot last month), whose addled state-of-the-nation proclamations about the King and his kingdom provide a good deal of comic relief.  

The action takes place in the King’s tawdry, faded marble throne room (designed by Julian Southgate), which is littered with cigarette butts and whose purple velvet curtains are held together by dust, cobwebs and regal willpower. Here, the King’s increasingly desperate bids to show that he’s still alive and rheumatically kicking, and his pleas for death to just give him another good century or so, are marked by farcical hyperbole and physical comedy.

This is a considered and well-designed production. There is a twin sense of exuberance and barely-muted panic that offers a high-energy entry point into the show, and the quick establishment of the farcical nature of the action in the characters’ brisk, silly entrances is a clever way of flagging the show’s comic intentions to an audience who might be a little uncertain as to whether or not death is a laughing matter. 

That said, this production Exit the King is also quite uneven in its pacing and tone. The assertive energy of the opening soon wanes, and the orthodox parts of the staging and characterisation don’t always gel well with the more heightened and unconventional aspects.

This is brought into sharp relief in the final fifteen minutes of the show: a sequence that is delivered with power, baffled horror and restraint, and that culminates in a bit of theatre magic that works magnificently on the broad, deep stage of the Court. It is a beautiful visual representation of the absurd, the unknowable quality of the world and, here, the incomprehensibility of our own deaths.

This part of the play alone is worth the price of admission, and it absolutely nails the tone of Ionesco’s absurdism. It’s also the first time that I get a sense of an honest, intimate and tangible relationship between characters, here between Berenger and Marguerite, who coaxes the King towards death, gently and with compassion, acting as fatalistic intermediary.

This scene’s clarity and focus also sit uncomfortably against the fluffier moments earlier. The comic, farcical sequences the make up much of the show are often genuinely funny; my companion, who likes his comedy black, loves it and says it’s his “favourite type of play”. Yet, the earlier portions of the play don’t have the same sharpness to them. I sometimes find my attention wandering, despite the heightened action and such theatrical conceits as the cast regularly breaking the fourth wall to remind us exactly how long it is until the play, and the King, will meet the final curtain. (This is compounded by the fact that, early on in the play, I can sense movement offstage and through the throne room’s translucent window, and it’s incredibly distracting.)  

I keep waiting for everything to be dialled up a few more notches to that magic, hysteric, uncertain register of hilarity so loved by Edward Albee, Tom Stoppard and so on; the point at which you’re not sure if laughing at the carnage makes you a bad person or not. There is so much promise here, but this production backs away from the precipice rather than dangling dangerously over the edge.

Despite these misgivings I really love that the Court has programmed this piece, and I hope that it finds an audience. 

Comments

Editor October 19th, 2015

And here is a link to Erin's chat about EXIT THE KING with Jesse Mulligan on Radio NZ's 'The Critics'.  
http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/afternoons/audio/201775218/theatre-review-with-erin-harrington 

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