In Drama King , the aptly named Stratford gives us an array of characters as well as the great man himself and rushes us through the 80 years of his life.
Born in 1873 Macready was destined to be a barrister when his fiery actor/manager father fell into debt and prison, forcing the 16-year-old William to take charge of the rather poor acting company of his father’ s theatre in Chester. Within two months he had shaken up the company and paid off all the theatre’s debts.
On his father’s release the young Macready made his leading actor debut as Romeo, heralding a new age of realistic acting that we today would call “ method “ – portraying Romeo’s feelings and spirit as his own, not through the mechanically rigid gestures that most leading actors of the time employed .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7lCAo9oDdo
Mark Stratford’s great gift in this show, which he also wrote, is to equally inhabit the life and soul of Macready – a much larger than life actor who was inherently shy and socially awkward, and as much a tyrant to his fellow performers as his father had been. Drama King shows us the many ups and downs of Macready’s career and it’s gripping to watch .
Like with all one-man shows I marvel at the sheer act of memory that Mark displays and he manages subtly to differentiate his own narrative from that of his subject and many other characters of the time including Charles Dickens, who dedicated Nicholas Nickleby to Macready.
The skill of the performance is that Mark Stratford really brings Macready to life and it’s a fascinating life to follow.
Complete with social distancing and other measures, it’s a joy it has survived to serve Brighton audiences.
Ticket details of Fringe shows at brightonfringe.org