The Box of Delights review – the RSC makes merry with Masefield’s fantasy

Royal Shakespeare theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon
This is a well-crafted, brilliantly acted version of John Masefield’s novel about an orphan who travels through time

Going small and swift are the magical transformations available to orphan Kay Harker from the mysterious box in John Masefield’s 1935 novel. The RSC’s new production goes big: bold video designs, aerial sequences, abundant puppetry, a sprawling and handsomely dressed cast, plus an eight-piece band. It’s swift, too, gliding through Kay’s travels to ancient times and his encounters with the 30s criminal underworld.

If the play loses some of the richly bewildering quality of Masefield’s storytelling, whose folklore envelops the reader like smoke, this is a well-crafted show that recognises Masefield’s place in the pantheon of fantasy novelists. It brings us, if not a lion, then wolves, a witch and a wardrobe, through which characters emerge in Tom Piper’s elegantly versatile set design.

Masefield, a former poet laureate, gave each chapter a rhyming couplet and interspersed the story with verse; his characters are “scrobbled” by kidnappers and danger is summoned by the haunting warning: “The wolves are running”. Piers Torday’s adaptation retains much of the idiosyncratic language, adds comedy to the menace, features plenty of carolling (including a wonderful set piece to open the second half) and gives Kay a more clearcut mission. It also uses an affecting modern-day framing device with Kay and his grandson, visiting for Christmas after his parents’ separation, underlining the novel’s view of the fragile preciousness of family. Torday also solves the problem of feeling deflated by the novel’s ending as he immediately establishes a dream world.

After unwelcome attention on a train – like Erich Kästner’s Emil a few years earlier – Kay befriends Punch and Judy man Cole Hawlings, who hands him the gold-striped box that can send him into the past. When first brandished, with the glow of Prema Mehta’s splendid lighting design, it practically freezes time on stage. (Strange, perhaps, not to have a passing reference, here in Stratford, to the novel’s theory that Shakespeare once owned the box.)

Director Justin Audibert, who staged this adaptation at Wilton’s Music Hall in London in 2017, keeps a warm tone of wonder and merriment while Samuel Wyer’s spectacular puppetry ranges from Hawlings’ waggy mutt to a tiny Kay for his Borrowers-esque adventures and a phoenix with glowing eyes and fan wings.

The show could more vividly realise Hawlings’ conflict with wizard Abner Brown and – a sign of more secular times – loses the sense that a threat to the clergy could result in the end of Christmas altogether. But it is brilliantly acted across the board. Callum Balmforth is a sensitive Kay, his tone set just a little too often at stupefaction, and has a particularly charming scene in which he tries using slang on his guardian. Mae Munuo excels as Kay’s ebullient friend, as does Jack Humphrey playing her whiny brother. The sequence in which the trio experience the world as different animals, amid Nina Dunn and Matthew Brown’s resplendent video design, is beautifully achieved.

Stephen Boxer is a genial Hawlings, Richard Lynch an increasingly comical Abner and Claire Price relishes the expanded role of witch Sylvia Daisy Pouncer. Tom Kanji as a conman (“ha-ha … what?” languidly ending his sentences) is one of several to capture the feel of the era. It is all deftly done, not so much scrobbling as gently leading us into Masefield-land.

Contributor

Chris Wiegand

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
RSC to put on work by poet who wrote Stratford theatre’s first words
John Masefield wrote poem for 1932 opening of Shakespeare Memorial theatre, which is now staging The Box of Delights

Dalya Alberge

24, Oct, 2023 @1:16 PM

Article image
The Box of Delights review – festive treat lifts the lid on a world of wonders
Matthew Kelly plays good and evil spirits in a magical, visually arresting adaptation of John Masefield’s classic children’s book

Michael Billington

11, Dec, 2017 @3:30 PM

Article image
A Christmas Carol review – Dickens's social ills touch the mind but not the heart
David Edgar’s lively adaptation for the RSC foregrounds the tale’s reforming message and features Phil Davis as a grotesquely good Scrooge

Michael Billington

07, Dec, 2017 @1:33 PM

Article image
Wendy: A Peter Pan Story review – an awfully modern adventure
Gaming imagery blends with traditional adventure scenery in an exuberant present-day adaptation of JM Barrie’s novel

Chris Wiegand

11, Dec, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
The week in theatre: Backstairs Billy; The Box of Delights; Brenda’s Got a Baby – review
The puns ricochet between Penelope Wilton and Luke Evans in a frisky royal tale of mistress and servant; merriment dispels mystery at the RSC; and a pregnancy drama that delivers in parts

Susannah Clapp

12, Nov, 2023 @5:30 AM

Article image
‘You could beat someone to death with that!’ Great theatre wigs – and their miraculous creators
Few things in theatre are more transformative than a wig. But who makes them? Can they really be worth thousands? And what looks best on a beheaded tyrant? We meet the hairpiece heroes and their yeti-like creations

David Jays

09, Nov, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
Hamnet review – slick adaptation captures Shakespeare’s horrified unravelling
Lolita Chakrabarti’s staging of Maggie O’Farrell’s moving novel about the death of the playwright’s son – and his resurrection in Hamlet – is powerfully played, with the occasional cheesy line

Arifa Akbar

13, Apr, 2023 @12:02 PM

Article image
Imperium review – Robert Harris's Cicero epic is a Roman triumph for the RSC
Mike Poulton’s two-part adaptation of Harris’s trilogy is an exhilarating and timely political drama about a democracy descending into tyranny

Michael Billington

08, Dec, 2017 @11:53 AM

Article image
Enter stage right: 12 theatre stars for 2020
Who will have audiences on the edge of their seats in the new year? Laurie Kynaston, Rosie Sheehy, Michelle Tiwo and Sadie Clark are among a dozen dazzling talents to watch

Chris Wiegand

30, Dec, 2019 @2:22 PM

Article image
The Buddha of Suburbia review – playful spin through Hanif Kureishi’s novel
Emma Rice directs an ebullient RSC version of the landmark 1990 story of sex, music, class and racism

Arifa Akbar

01, May, 2024 @12:16 PM