FIND OUT MORE ABOUT BRITS IN LA

Sunday, May 10, 2026

REVIEW: PICASSO: LE MONSTRE SACRÉ - WITH BRITISH ACTOR PETER TATE

 

Peter Tate as Picasso - Photo by 
Brigitta Scholz Mastroianni/
NUX Photography

At the Odyssey Theatre, Picasso: Le Monstre Sacré arrives like a provocation rather than a conventional biographical drama. Directed by Olivier Award-winner Guy Masterson and adapted by Peter Tate and Masterson from Terri D’Alfonso’s The Loves of Picasso, the production strips away sentimentality in favour of confrontation, asking audiences to wrestle with the uncomfortable divide between artistic genius and personal destruction.

Peter Tate’s performance is extraordinary. Any actor capable of sustaining a multi-character monologue for ninety minutes deserves admiration, but Tate elevates the form into something electrifying. Channeling the ferocious intensity of Steven Berkoff with flashes of Anthony Hopkins’ psychological precision, he commands the stage with total authority. At times seductive, at times monstrous, his Picasso is never reduced to caricature. Instead, Tate presents a man intoxicated by his own brilliance, unapologetically defending the damage inflicted on the women orbiting his life and art.

The production’s greatest achievement lies in its refusal to offer easy judgment. Picasso addresses the audience as though standing trial, demanding that we decide whether artistic greatness absolves moral failure. Tate handles these shifts in tone masterfully, moving between arrogance, charm, cruelty and vulnerability with unnerving fluidity. The effect is mesmerizing.

Equally effective is the production’s technical design. The soundscape and visual elements heighten the emotional volatility of the piece without overwhelming it. On-screen performances by Sandra Collodel, Claudia Godi, Margot Sikabonyi and Milena Vukotic create haunting echoes of the women Picasso consumed and discarded, while Eirini Kariori’s costume and set design provide a stark, elegant frame for Tate’s relentless performance.

The acclaim surrounding the production is well deserved. British critics have described it as “marvelous, brilliant, enthralling” and “an artistic and theatrical masterpiece,” and those accolades feel entirely earned in this Los Angeles engagement.

Running for only two weeks at the Odyssey Theatre, Picasso: Le Monstre Sacré is not comfortable viewing, nor should it be. It is a fierce, intelligent examination of genius, ego and moral compromise, anchored by a towering solo performance from Peter Tate that burns long after the lights go down.


8/10

Odyssey Theatre Ensemble presents Peter Tate in Picasso: Le Monstre Sacré
May 8 – May 17
Odyssey Theatre, 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles
Tickets: $15–$35
OdysseyTheatre.com | (310) 477-2055 ext. 2

No comments:

Post a Comment