THEATRE PREVIEW
DEATH
AND THE MAIDEN SAN DIEGO REPERTORY THEATRE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine May 1993
A man whose car
breaks down on the highway is given a lift home by a friendly stranger. The man's wife, believing she recognizes in
the stranger the voice of the torturer who raped her several years before,
draws a gun, holds him hostage and proceeds to put him on trial in her own
living room.
The play is
“Death and the Maiden”. The time is the
present, and the place, according to the stage directions of Chilean playwright
Ariel Dorfman, is "a country that is
In the
post-Pinochet period, after seventeen years of exile, Dorfman returned to his
homeland. He felt compelled to confront
the trauma that was gnawing at the soul of his countrymen. It is not a small, personal piece about the
aftermath of one dictator's regime. It
is, in the words of the
To San Diego
Repertory Theatre artistic director Doug Jacobs, who directs the
The play is
part of the Rep's Teatro sin Fronteras program, developed in 1988 to showcase
the work of Latino writers. Jacobs met
Dorfman that year, when he came to see the Rep's production of “Burning
Patience”, a taut drama written by Dorfman's school chum, Antonio
Scarmata. Dorfman's plays have begun
where Scarmata's left off.
But the themes
of this play, says Jacobs, are universal.
"It's very classic, almost Greek, while at the same time
functioning as a modern political thriller.
It's about the way power works within a couple. Trust and mistrust between a husband and
wife. Violence between men and
women. And how difficult it is to
determine the truth -- in individuals, families and also in a country as a whole. It's very personal, very passionate. And very relevant to issues of violence in
Ironically,
this production is strategically placed in the middle of a campaign to bring a
theater back to life. At the end of
last June, the Rep's accumulated deficit was in excess of $400,000. In the past five years, the theater has
struggled to stay alive, mounting a massive (though not wholly successful)
"Keep the Lights On" campaign, scaling down the production schedule
from seven to six annual presentations, releasing controversial managing
director Adrian Stewart, almost halving the rest of the administrative and
production staff (now down to 25), and skirting interminable rumors of
mismanagement and impending closure. (Some
said “Death and the Maiden” would be the Rep's swan song).
But producing
director Sam Woodhouse remains optimistic.
He's spearheading "a very dramatic and aggressive financial
stabilization campaign intended to break the cycle of deficit spending and
crisis fundraising." The specific
goals of the campaign are to reduce expenses by $100,000 and raise $200,000 by
July. According to Woodhouse, "The
success of this campaign is critical to the survival of this theater, and its
future. At this point, the campaign is
firmly on track."
In the decreased
expenditure department, the large-cast musical, “Sweeney Todd”, scheduled for
April, was replaced by a small-cast, out-of-town musical production “Always
Patsy Kline”. In terms of fundraising,
the Rep is receiving some power-packed assistance. Members of the
One of the
strongest playing cards in the Rep's hand is its firm commitment to culturally
diverse programming. In the 1992-93
seasons, 70% of the people onstage were actors of color (the national average
is about 15%). The company fiercely
supports writers of color. Next season
will highlight the world premiere of “The Dream Project”, a bilingual jazz opera
inspired by Calderón de la Barca's "Life's a Dream," produced with
major funding from the Meet the
Composer foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. And this year, on the heels of a broad
range of multicultural offerings:
Latins Anonymous, “Spunk”, a gospel “Christmas Carol”, two by Brenda
Wong Aoki and “The Dybbuk”, there is the searing and powerful “Death and the
Maiden”. All fingers are crossed.
"The
challenges are extreme," Woodhouse says soberly. "I will not use the word desperate. I don't feel desperate. It's not possible to create, and to solve
challenges, by being desperate."
Chin up, chest out, curtain up.
The indomitable Rep forges on......
©1993
Patté Productions Inc.