Food for Thought Theatre have thrown down the gauntlet and demanded satisfaction from the town of Oxford this week with The Three Musketeers. Audiences who venture down Pembroke Street will have no trouble gaining the honour of their ticket price back, but it may be harder for their competitors in the outdoor theatre space to so easily win this duel. This is just the company’s third production, yet it beggars belief that the run is only 5 nights in the courtyard of The Story Museum. From Martha Ibbotson’s fight choreography alone, we believed we were at the opening night of a long summer run.
The choice of play is à point, Dumas’ timeless tale of bromance in the court of King Louis strikes the perfect balance of high camp, court intrigue, and adventure for kids young and old. The location in the higgledy-piggledy courtyard of The Story Museum is ideal, and very well used. The casting came off without a hitch. Your titular trio of Athos, Porthos, and Aramis (Simon Billington, Josh Wedge, and Joseph Hartshorn) have all the heft, swagger, and guffaw you could want, and their maturity sets nicely against Tom Wilson’s mercurial D’Artagnan. The youth made more innocent in this adaptation, painfully preening like the original fresh off the haycart Gascon farmboy he is. Roger Dalrymple slithers up and down the stairs as Cardinal Richelieu, surely one of the most satisfying baddies in fiction. His machinations and mannerisms never quite veer into Ming the Merciless territory, the spider-like Cardinal being a much more measured chap, but Dalrymple oozes as flamboyantly as the Musketeers swash buckles, and the play is a better balanced thing for it. James McDougall’s Count Rochefort is part Michael Palin, part Tony Robinson, and made for a magnificently murine henchman, he also covered good mileage and gave good coverage in several other minor parts.
Beth Burns needs only a hairband to transmogrify from frustrated Queen to slinking Femme Fatale, and in doing so her shoulders rather hold up the sky, elegantly providing space for the boys to play out their games of sword and words. Speaking of boys, Daisy Cook was an inspired choice as King Louis. The wig, the outfit, the vocal pitches, all so on note for the man who became king at 9 and couldn’t quite grow past that age — while still being a believably lovable monarch for Anne to fall for and the Musketeers to fight for. Tulsi Talbot is the Queen’s lady-in-waiting, Constance, giving great gal-pal energy one moment, and magnetic romantic interest the next, but this is foremost a tale of bromance, not romance, after all. Still, she has the best bit of prop-comedy I’ve seen in a venue like this in a long time, and is also, alongside her collaborator Harvey Coates, at the musical core of the performance. Their musical collective, Mayura, arranged the entire score masterfully, evoking Parisian taverns when needed, but referencing Studio Ghibli toward the end, tying the fairytale nature of the whole thing together neatly.
Given the size and ability of the cast, the seats available, and the evident effort that has been ploughed into this play, I felt as if they must be doing 3-4 nights per week for the next month at least. I was ready to write a review praising The Story Museum for their shrewdness in booking such an outfit for what could become a fixture of early summer’s entertainment. I daresay they could fill matinées here all term long, provided they keep the kids out of swords’ way. Unbelievably, it’s only around this week, so you must try your best to get a ticket as soon as you can!