As the manipulators of the masses – their elected tribunes – get in their piece of dirty work right at the beginning of the play, we tend to sympathise with the returning military hero Caius Marcius’ low opinion of the great unwashed. His best friend, the entirely honest and trustworthy Menenius, played with beautiful sardonic humour by Mark Gatiss has also got the measure of the crowd: “ You know neither me, yourselves or anything” he scornfully tells them.
Though it’s a play apparently about warfare, there’s only one tiny fight – between Caius and his long-term enemy Aufidius, and even that is inconclusive.
This is a play built upon long set-piece public speeches – orations really, much in the manner of Henry V or Othello, and there’s very little action to speak of. On the small Donmar stage space with the audience on three sides, director Josie Rourke keeps the action swift and highly regimented and the characters sit or stand among the audience for much of the play.
Hiddleston is handsome, charismatic, younger than most previous players of the part, and sometimes as fickle as the crowd he so loathes.
The most emotionally draining scene in the play is her heartfelt pleas for her hero son turned enemy of the people , to broker a peace with Rome. It’s tear-jerking stuff and close-ups of Hiddleston show genuine watery eyes.
Menenius, eventually spurned by Coriolanus, tellingly sums him up : “ His nature’s too noble for the world”
And so it proves.
Coriolanus is on YouTube until Thursday 11 June. If you watch please consider a donation to either the National or the Donmar to keep theatre alive.
Watch it on Youtube for free here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHqkEruwBT0