One of Audibert's aims was to produce a thought-provoking production. Given current topics surrounding domestic abuse and toxic masculinity, this play would have allowed for conversation anyway, but somehow having the genders flipped really highlighted how far we have come as a society.
Joseph Arkley as a male Katherine and Claire Price as a female Petruchia. Image taken from the RSC website: https://www.rsc.org.uk/the-taming-of-the-shrew/production-photos |
Amy Trigg as Biondella. Image taken from the RSC website: https://www.rsc.org.uk/the-taming-of-the-shrew/production-photos |
However, this gender flip made victims of men in a patriarchal world, and women proved to be just as vicious as a misogynistic man can be. The male Katherine was "tamed" as per the script, but the situation did not sit any more comfortably than it would if the character was in her traditional form. The director had said that he wanted this production to start a conversation, and the discomfort that the audience felt at Katherine's humiliation was definitely a talking point after the show. My mum (who accompanied me to the show) commented that this situation would never happen "in real life" because men are physically stronger than women, but after some discussion we agreed that it wasn't actually about physical strength, but power. This play will always demonstrate a power imbalance, and gender is simply the easiest way to display this on a stage. It could be done in other, less controversial ways, such as via a colour-coordinated costume, but there will always have to be a victim of this cruel world.