Madame Armfeldt pronounces

Angela Lansbury, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Keaton Whitaker as three generations of Armfeldts in 'A Little Night Music'
Angela Lansbury is the wittiest, least self-regarding and most articulate octogenarian actress I've ever come across. That much seems clear from her half-hour interview with Mark Coles on the estimable, if sometimes rather narrow-agenda-ed BBC World Service arts programme The Strand. At 84, Lansbury has been having a whale of a time venting the laid-back disapproval of old Madame Armfeldt in Sondheim's A Little Night Music. The run at  Broadway's Walter Kerr Theatre with this cast, which of course also features Catherine Zeta-Jones as her actress daughter, comes to an end on 20 June and Lansbury is tipped to glean yet another Tony as Best Featured Actress in a Broadway show.

She told Coles, who seemed to be doing more acting for the interview than she was, that it didn't bother her in the slightest whether she got that Tony or not; and we believe her. The elegant turn of phrase occasionally conceals a wry iron fist in velvet glove (on Mrs Lovett in Sweeney Todd - "You have to make use of what's to hand"; in other words, if it's people to make into pies, so be it). But there's no doubt why this woman is still admired as much for her unflappable personality as she is for her impeccable comic timing. How, for once, I regret that London isn't Broadway.

Stop press:  A Little Night Music re-opens on 13 July with - guess who? - Elaine Stritch and Bernadette Peters.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

rating

0

explore topics

share this article

more theatre

This transfer from Regent's Park Open Air Theatre sustains its magic
Story of self-discovery through playing the piano resounds in Anoushka Lucas's solo show
Tone never settles, but Sondheim's genius carries the day
Shaw's once-shocking play pairs Imelda Staunton with her real-life daughter
Ince's fidelity to the language allows every nuance to be exposed
David Ireland pits a sober AA sponsor against a livewire drinker, with engaging results
The 1952 classic lives to see another day in notably name-heavy revival
The Irishman's first new play in over a decade is engaging but overstuffed
This wild, intelligent play is a tour de force till the doom-laden finale