Shadowlands review β Hugh Bonneville charms in a weepie thatβs as creaky as an old library
Aldwych theatre, London
William Nicholsonβs take on CS Lewisβs marriage to an American divorcee should have you in bits but it fails to feel as eviscerating as it should
The drama of love and loss in Shadowlands has played out movingly in film and on television. William Nicholsonβs take on CS Lewisβs marriage to an American divorcee is that of late-found passion, terminal illness and a crisis of the celebrated writerβs Christian faith. In all its iterations, it is an old-fashioned weepie. In this production, originally staged at Chichester Festival theatre, it just feels old-fashioned.
It has charm and pulls you into its sadness but seems as creaky as the half-filled, wood-panelled library in its backdrop. There is too much a sense of a drama unfolding, from the moment Lewis (Hugh Bonneville) receives a letter from American fan, Joy Davidman (Maggie Siff), to his slow falling in love and her descent into illness.
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Β© Photograph: Johan Persson

Β© Photograph: Johan Persson

Β© Photograph: Johan Persson


