Shakespeare had a crafty knack for bringing drama alive with a crackling intensity; this brilliant play about the extraordinary drama of Brexit brings it even more alive with the Bard’s mellifluous verse.
You get to relive the crazed chaos that an allegedly strong and stable Conservative Party unleashed on the British State with terrible consequences that are still unfolding, obscured by bodies being allowed to pile high from the Covid Pandemic. I doubt Ed Milliband could have out-done this with his own Red brand of alleged chaos.
Michael Gove and his Daily Mail columnist wife are given the famous lines of Macbeth and the ambitious, plotting Lady Macbeth. Highly appropriate considering how often Gove has wielded the knife of betrayal in those Neo-Gothic corridors of power. I wonder when all the hand-washing will start?
Jacob Rees-Mogg lends a sinister presence to proceedings, compared in the text to a dark pencil.
Boris Johnson’s over-the-top manner of speaking is superbly spliced with Shakespearean language; highly appropriate when one considers he may have missed urgent Cobra meetings at the start of the pandemic, writing his yet-to-be published book on Shakespeare while the country was ravaged by a modern plague. Still, someone’s got to pay for all that gold wallpaper!
If Brexit has you feeling fed up, frustrated and helpless, as I do, this wonderful text will give you some welcome relief.