By Neil Durham
WORTH A LOOK?: ***1/2
WHEN?: Monday 9 December 2024, opens 17 December and runs through 1 February 2025 RUNTIME: 135 minutes (including a 20-minute interval)
We’ve certainly had the recent windy weather to fully appreciate the timing of this much looked-forward-to production starring Storm Sigourney.
- Read on for reasons including how it’s only really when Weaver gets to her feet that this production has wind in its sails
Gone are the cameras and screens which characterised director Jamie Lloyd’s most recent work (Romeo and Juliet, Duke Of York’s Theatre) and instead we have an enchanting opening against a giant billowing blue sheet signifying waves and sails as Sigourney Weaver’s Prospero sits on a stool contemplating her exile with her daughter to the island where Shakespeare’s tale is set.
Switching the gender of the main character here reminds us of Weaver’s most acclaimed work – her Oscar nominations include film Aliens which explores the mother-daughter bond – as she makes her West End debut in 1 of the most anticipated productions of the year.
However, it was aerial work, enchanting singing and the touching vulnerability of Mason Alexander Park playing, aptly, Ariel, a spirit freed yet bound to serve Prospero, that we came away from this much-abbreviated production most impressed by.
Funny too is Gavin and Stacey‘s Mathew Horne (The Miser, Garrick Theatre) as king’s jester Trinculo who is 1 of a number shipwrecked when Prospero conjures up a storm to deliver the men who betrayed her to her exile to the island to suffer the consequences.

One of our party is a big fan of The Tempest, which we’ve previously seen starring Simon Russell Beale at the Barbican in 2017, and felt this version was too edited and that those unfamiliar with it would struggle to get as much out of it as Shakespeare intended.
There are essentially 3 stories in The Tempest with Prospero separating those shipwrecked on the island and herself being won over by the love story between her daughter Miranda, Mara Huf giving us Zendaya hooded vibes, and Bridgerton‘s James Phoon giving it his all.
Then we have the lighthearted drunks including Horne’s Trinculo and Jason Barnett’s Stephano (The Hot Wing King, National Theatre) who plot a rebellion against Prospero with the island’s only inhabitant Caliban, Forbes Masson (Doctor Faustus, Duke Of York’s Theatre) giving a very memorable sensual comic turn bare-chested, complete with basque and skimpy pants.

In the final story Selina Cadell (Hamlet, Riverside Studios) has the sparkle in 1’s eye of someone who knows exactly what’s going on while others around her may be less clear as the final group of those shipwrecked face their reckoning for their part in Prospero’s downfall.
Weaver’s Prospero sits on a stool for much of the 1st act heavily microphoned and could be reciting an audiobook. It’s only really when she gets to her feet in the 2nd act that this play has propulsion and gets wind in its sails.
We’re delighted Lloyd’s given his cameras and screens the elbow, this is a visually arresting Tempest and certainly an improvement on the weather outside but we just wished Storm Sigourney’s central role had a bit more legs and a little less stool.
- Main pictures via Facebook courtesy Theatre Royal Drury Lane and Jamie Lloyd Company Tickets
- Have you seen an Jamie Lloyd show before and what did you think of this 1? Let us know what you thought in the comments below
- Enjoyed this preview? Follow monstagigz on Twitter @NeilDurham, email neildurham3@gmail.com and check us out on Instagram and Facebook
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I saw your review. Very generous. So many people left at the interval after such a dreadful first half that if the second half was any good they’d never have known. I’ve seen more than 50 shows this year and this is the worst. It’s possibly the worst Shakespeare I’ve ever seen. Ariel was excellent. But overall – dire. And whatever my personal opinion, or yours, for so many people to leave at the interval that even the security people commented on it as we left, is surely a sign of one star review.
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Sad to see (where I could); noisy, quasi-erotic, bawdy, uncoordinated and definitely not funny. Was it really Shakespeare? Please, no more of these overpriced travesties.
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So, a chance to see an actress of note, otherwise a paltry serving of the Bard.
Sigourney should do better.
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Saw it in preview. I expected something magical. Not this mangled Christmas turkey.
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I saw it on opening night, the couple next to us didn’t come back after the interval and I was sorely tempted to leave myself. Sigourney gave the blandest rendition of Shakespeare ever, it was like being back at school when random kids would be made to read sections and have no idea what they were saying! Clearly mic issues as she sounded like she had a lisp but even that wasn’t fixed for the second half. Loved Mason and Matthew, their performances saved the show but I would still only give 1 star, possibly a 2 out of 5. Maybe having seen Macbeth the other week raised the bar to high!
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I just saw the play this evening of I17/12/24.
I must agree with some posts on here that Sigourney was s bit bland. I love her as an actress for 30+ years now but it felt like her heart wasn’t in it.
Unfortunately she still had a lisp so I do not think this is mic issue. It seems to me like she had her teeth done or wearing ill fitting dentures or something.
Also we have queued orderly at the stage door and I was like 20 meters from the door but Sigourney only signed few autographs and then left. It would have taken her maybe extra 5 minutes to finish signing everyone’s autographs but she couldn’t be bothered.
Clearly the biggest star of the show was Mason as Ariel who kindly signed my programme.
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