MARK TURNER holds on tight for a mesmerising display of Neath-born ragtime virtuosity
The question for any director of Christopher Marlowe’s rarely performed early play, which reads like a dramatic poem, is how to create a work of living theatre. Kimberley Sykes and her creative team have succeeded brilliantly.
Marlowe gives his own slant to the episode in Virgil’s Aeneid where the Trojan Aeneas, escaping from the destruction of his native city and its people, finds himself and his band shipwrecked on the coast of Queen Dido’s Carthage, now Libya.
Marlowe, reputed to have been an atheist, never had much time for God or the gods in general. His play opens depicting Olympus as a naughty school playground with the headmaster Jupiter engaged in highly questionable behaviour with a youthful Ganymede and berated by his daughter Venus for leaving her son Aeneas to his fate on Earth rather than pursuing his mission to reach Italy and found Rome.

GORDON PARSONS is riveted by a translation of Shakespeare’s tragedy into joyous comedy set in a southern black homestead

GORDON PARSONS is enthralled by an erudite and entertaining account of where the language we speak came from

GORDON PARSONS endures heavy rock punctuated by Shakespeare, and a delighted audience

GORDON PARSONS advises you to get up to speed on obscure ancient ceremonies to grasp this interpretation of a late Shakespearean tragi-comedy