An African country teeters on the edge of civil war, as a society prepares to drive out its colonial present and claim an independent future.An African country teeters on the edge of civil war, as a society prepares to drive out its colonial present and claim an independent future.An African country teeters on the edge of civil war, as a society prepares to drive out its colonial present and claim an independent future.
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- TriviaThe play ran at the National Theatre between March 22nd and June 2nd 2016 and filmed for the National Theatre Archive. The film was made available on YouTube, as part of the NT at Home program, for one week only between July 2nd and July 9th 2020, during the closure of the theatre because of the Coronavirus pandemic.
Featured review
'National Theatre Live: Les Blancs' (2020)
Opening thoughts: It does help that the play, Lorraine Hansberry's last and the play that she considered her most important, is a riveting one. The powerful and still relevant subject matter and the richness of the character writing really grip emotionally. 'Les Blancs' does deserve to be known a lot more and of the plays introduced to me recently that aren't favourites to perform it is one of the best. Have always gotten a lot of pleasure watching the National Theatre cinema broadcasts so that was another reason to see the production.
This production of 'Les Blancs' is fantastic in every aspect. This is the third production seen of Yael Farber, after 'Salome' and 'The Crucible'. In comparison to those two productions, 'Les Blancs' isn't quite as outstanding as 'The Crucible' though it is very close. It is though significantly better than the disappointing 'Salome', which just didn't come together for me. Come together this production did wonderfully, and it couldn't have been a more ideal performance of the play.
Good things: Everything. Visually, the production is very striking and very rich in atmosphere. Especially the lighting. The use of music is truly haunting while also stirring, really making a huge amount of impact and authenticity while not being over-used or heavy-handed. Hansberry's prose is still tear inducing, hard hitting and inspirational.
Farber's stage direction is always tasteful while also creative. Had no issue following the story or understanding what Farber was trying to say, both of which big problems in 'Salome'. Farber does an exceptional job at making the drama wrench the gut and always boldly arresting (even in the slighter story stretches), nothing felt self indulgent here and nothing felt too careful. The drama is hard hitting and moving as ought and is as relevant now as it has always been for generations.
All the performances are outstanding, especially the edge of the seat one of Danny Sapani with a truly moving Sian Phillips (far from passive here) close behind. James Fleet is noble and conflicted in an affecting way. The character interaction often sears, and it will be hard to forget the ending and the number of tears it induced for me.
Closing thoughts: In conclusion, fantastic.
10/10.
Opening thoughts: It does help that the play, Lorraine Hansberry's last and the play that she considered her most important, is a riveting one. The powerful and still relevant subject matter and the richness of the character writing really grip emotionally. 'Les Blancs' does deserve to be known a lot more and of the plays introduced to me recently that aren't favourites to perform it is one of the best. Have always gotten a lot of pleasure watching the National Theatre cinema broadcasts so that was another reason to see the production.
This production of 'Les Blancs' is fantastic in every aspect. This is the third production seen of Yael Farber, after 'Salome' and 'The Crucible'. In comparison to those two productions, 'Les Blancs' isn't quite as outstanding as 'The Crucible' though it is very close. It is though significantly better than the disappointing 'Salome', which just didn't come together for me. Come together this production did wonderfully, and it couldn't have been a more ideal performance of the play.
Good things: Everything. Visually, the production is very striking and very rich in atmosphere. Especially the lighting. The use of music is truly haunting while also stirring, really making a huge amount of impact and authenticity while not being over-used or heavy-handed. Hansberry's prose is still tear inducing, hard hitting and inspirational.
Farber's stage direction is always tasteful while also creative. Had no issue following the story or understanding what Farber was trying to say, both of which big problems in 'Salome'. Farber does an exceptional job at making the drama wrench the gut and always boldly arresting (even in the slighter story stretches), nothing felt self indulgent here and nothing felt too careful. The drama is hard hitting and moving as ought and is as relevant now as it has always been for generations.
All the performances are outstanding, especially the edge of the seat one of Danny Sapani with a truly moving Sian Phillips (far from passive here) close behind. James Fleet is noble and conflicted in an affecting way. The character interaction often sears, and it will be hard to forget the ending and the number of tears it induced for me.
Closing thoughts: In conclusion, fantastic.
10/10.
- TheLittleSongbird
- Aug 21, 2024
- Permalink
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- National Theatre Live: Les Blancs
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- Runtime2 hours 30 minutes
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Top Gap
What was the official certification given to National Theatre at Home: Les Blancs (2020) in the United Kingdom?
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