It is hard to imagine a musical and a  venue more suited to one another than Stephen Sondheim and James  Lapine’s witty melting pot of Grimm and Perrault fairytales Into The  Woods and the gorgeously leafy Regents Park Open Air Theatre (the loveliest venue in London on a  clear summer evening). The effect of starting the evening in partial  dusk with darkness falling by the interval has rarely been so ideal. As  there are few musicals that are more wordy, one can only imagine how  difficult it must have been to get the clarity just right. Credit must  firstly go to sound designer Mike Walker for his outstanding work. I  only worry about how many people have missed the second act entirely,  assuming that the ‘happy ever after’ that concludes the first act is the  ending. The couple next to me certainly thought it was time to leave in  spite of the lack of bows.
The episodic first act is a piece of  theatre that is quite complete in itself, in which a childless baker and  his wife embark on a quest to collect an array of items that will  reverse the curse put on the Baker’s family by the witch next door, with  the help and hindrance of assorted characters from other fairytales,  who are all out to make their own wishes come true. The happy endings  that ensue are then complicated when the murdered Giant’s wife (voiced  by Judi Dench) wreaks her revenge. The lengths that people will go to in  order to get their wishes through the manipulation of others or  self-deception (often both) is one of Sondheim’s favourite themes, as  are the subjects of parenting and self knowledge. By the time the last  midnight strikes, everybody will have had to have lost something in  order to move forward.  
This is the only theatre where you’re  lucky enough to get wittily timed appearances from visiting pigeons. The  set by Soutra Gilmour, an intricate network of wooden platforms linked  by ladders resembles a giant climbing frame and evokes just how easy it  is to get lost and trapped in these woods. Regents Park ought to be  given a special award for assembling the most wonderful ensemble casts  and this is no exception. Co-directors Timothy Sheader and Liam Steel’s  (who also provides the expressive choreography) attention to detail  ensures that even the most minor characters are well drawn, including  Valda Aviks’s cameo as Little Red Riding Hood’s knife-wielding Granny  and Alice Fearn’s transformation from a young woman hidden from the  world to embittered alcoholic in the rather thankless role of Rapunzel.
As the Baker’s Wife (the best role in  the show), Jenna Russell (who was recently a highlight of the Sondheim  Prom) brilliantly illuminates that fine line between being cunning and  conniving. Rather like Sondheim’s arch manipulator Mrs Lovett in Sweeney  Todd, the Baker’s Wife is an eminently practical woman of humble  means who knows what she wants and sets out to get it, but also has an  inclination to fantasise. While offering Jack a few ‘magic’ beans in  return for his cow isn’t as extreme as turning unsuspecting customers  into meat pies, the idea of twisting morality for the greater good, “If  the thing you do is pure in intent/If it’s meant and it’s just a little  bent/Does it matter?” isn’t entirely dissimilar. Russell beautifully  embodies being smitten with the idea of royalty in her envy of  Cinderella’s escapades at the ball and her yearning glances at the  princes. When Cinderella’s Prince sweeps her off her feet with the least  romantic chat up line ever, “Life is often so unpleasant, you must know  that as a peasant,” it has never seemed so unfair that sex and death  always have to be interlinked like that.
In the role of the Baker’s Wife’s  husband, Mark Hadfield is not a natural singer, but he gives the  character bumbling charm in the first act and poignant bewilderment when  he loses the woman who has been the brains of the operation. Helen  Dallimore is an endearing, dreadlocked Cinderella more baffled that  charmed by the Prince’s attentions and grows in strength to become the  matriarch of the new ‘family’ at the end. Maybe in the sequel to Act II  she marries the Baker. Michael Xavier (doubling up as a Freudian rather  than suave Wolf who seduces Red Riding Hood and granny too) and Simon  Thomas provide excellent comic foils as the two narcissistic princes,  who get some of the best lines in the piece in their comic lament Agony  and whose aesthetic resembles Russell Brand crossed with something out  of Tolkien. The ever so glamorous Hannah Waddingham is unrecognisable in  her old crone disguise and she brings her characteristic regal flair to  the beautiful but powerless Witch. Credit must also go to the costume  department for the whimsical with a touch of grunge costumes.
Timothy Sheader’s fascinating innovation  in his staging is to have a runaway child as the narrator who stage  manages the events. “Children may not obey,/But children will listen”,  has never seemed so poignant in the way in which very adult issues can  cause damage by entering the consciousness of a child through the power  of words.
This is certainly a blissful production  for the greatest living (and in my opinion all-time greatest) composer  and lyricist’s 80th birthday year. My own wish is that the  Donmar’s upcoming revival of Sondheim’s Passion reaches the  same heights.
Written for A Younger Theatre 

