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The Audience gives Queen Elizabeth II the royal treatment

Corgis nearly steal the show in uncritical look inside the British monarchy
audience
Ted Cole, as Prime Minister John Major, and Anna Galvin, as Queen Elizabeth II, star in The Audience. Photo David Cooper

Actor Anna Galvin does a fine job of portraying Queen Elizabeth II in her adult years from her brisk, slightly bristly manner right down to her sensible shoes. Bernard Cuffling makes a toffee-nosed but softhearted Equerry showing off the (imagined) Hepplewhite furniture in the Audience Room of Buckingham Palace where the Queen meets every Tuesday with a progression of prime ministers. And Galvin’s daughter, Bianca Sanchez Galvin, making her professional debut, is a precocious young Elizabeth before she becomes Queen.

But Navi, Link, Pumpkin and Bacon — four adorable Corgis — steal the show right out from underneath everyone on the Stanley stage. On opening night, applause immediately rang out when first one, then two and finally all four Corgis ran onto the stage. Over her 65-year reign the Queen has owned 30 Pembroke Welsh Corgis, about whom she blithely commented in a televised interview, “They bite, you know.”

Response to Peter Morgan’s The Audience will depend on where you stand vis-a-vis the monarchy. The January 2017 Toronto production was soundly trashed by the Globe and Mail’s Kelly J. Nestruck who wrote, referring to Morgan, “He’s not written a comedy or drama or even history, but a hagiography.”

Arguably, that’s true. Morgan’s Elizabeth II shows few, if any, warts.

But for those who think the Queen serves a purpose, persevering through thick and thin and rising above scandal, The Audience is entertaining, even educational. The Queen has held these weekly conversations with 13 prime ministers since her coronation in 1952, and Morgan’s play gives us a brief sketch of eight of them.

For those who are caught up watching The Crown, perhaps The Audience will seem like thin gruel. Obviously the Arts Club staging is spare compared to the lavish setting of the Netflix hit.

But I liked the play and this production.

One after the other, the various prime ministers enter, are greeted by Her Majesty and begin their conversations. Joel Wirkkunen’s Winston Churchill gives advice to the young queen: “The duty that has befallen you is an honour.” She bridles upon recognizing the truth of her situation: “You [the prime ministers] have all the power and I have none.”

John Major, portrayed by Ted Cole, “only wanted to be ordinary” and confessed he had passed only three of his O Levels to which the Queen responds she passed no examinations at all, never having been to school but was always tutored at home.

David Marr reveals “the ruffian” in working class Harold Wilson while Tom McBeath, as Labour leader Gordon Brown, almost insults the Queen who responds, amused but not annoyed, to his inadvertent negative comment with, “That started off as a compliment and went somewhere else.”

From Chris Britton’s prickly Sir Anthony Eden to casual Tony Blair (Jay Hindle) and David Cameron (Hindle again), Elizabeth II proves she does her homework and makes her opinions known.

Of all the prime minsters, the most aggressive and the least respectful is Margaret Thatcher (Erin Ormond) who barely manages to be polite in the Queen’s presence.

Yes, The Audience is an unabashed homage to Elizabeth II. Directed by Sarah Rodgers, The Audience finds little fault with the little girl who grew up to become the queen at the tender age of 26 and has doggedly stood her ground. And, yes, playwright/screenwriter Peter Morgan has been milking the monarchy for material for years.

So don’t go to The Audience if you think the Royal Family is irrelevant. Do go if you think, in changing times, having a stalwart, gracious, well-spoken, committed, dog-loving Queen of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth is something to hold onto. Navi, Link, Pumpkin and Bacon are a bonus.

For more reviews, go to .

The Audience is at the Stanley until Feb. 26. For tickets, call 604-687-1644 or go to .