THEATRE PREVIEW
WOMEN
DIRECTORS: LISA PETERSON/ KELLIE
EVANS-O'CONNOR
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine June 1993
It's a
male-dominated profession. Men
generally run the financial and creative sides of the business, and they've
been slow to let women breathe the rarefied theatrical air. But things are changing, both on the local
and the national scene. It's a good
news/bad news time for women directors.
The good news
is that one of our major theaters -- the La Jolla Playhouse --named a young
woman -- Lisa Peterson, 32 -- to the position of Associate Director, and she's
about to direct again (George Bernard Shaw's “Arms and the Man”, June 27-August
15). More good news: a young woman -- Kellie Evans O'Connor, 36
-- is directing the next offering of the San Diego Comic Opera (Jacques
Offenbach's “La Perichole”, June 18-27).
The bad news is
on a larger scale: within the past few
years, two very prominent female directors were fired from their very
high-profile positions (artistic directors):
Anne Bogart from Trinity Repertory Company in Providence, RI and more
recently, Joanne Akalaitis from the New York Shakespeare Festival, a job for
which she was hand-picked by the dying Joseph Papp.
"Those
were two major setbacks for women directors," says Peterson, who was lured
to
Peterson
herself has not been subjected to any of the above. Ten years ago, fresh out of
Playhouse
artistic director Des McAnuff had an eye on Peterson for some time, and he was,
he said, counting on her "to keep us in touch with her contemporaries, our
emerging theater artists."
Peterson finds
it "flattering" to be cast as a representative of her
generation. "It truly is the reason
I'm here," she confesses, "and I don't have a problem with being
hired because I'm a woman. My feeling
is, you get the work, then you surprise people, show them you “do” know what
you're doing, and then you can drive the boat."
Peterson has
definitely proved she knows what she's doing -- on both coasts. Last year, she impressed local critics and
audiences with her direction of “The Swan”, a modern myth that was part of the
Playhouse's FutureFest, a new program featuring young writers and directors. This year the directors are young again but
the writers are long dead. Peterson's
production of “Arms and the Man” plays in repertory with newcomer Matthew
Wilder's take on Eugene O'Neill's “The Hairy Ape”.
Peterson is
strongly committed to new works, but she's intrigued with the
"danger" in Shaw. "The
terrorist side of him," she says, "the iconoclast, is often
forgotten." Shaw's satiric look at
romantic attitudes about love and war is often played as a folk tale or a
drawing room comedy. But with its
setting in the Balkans and its strong images of the fighting Serbian army, it
has an added edge and relevance today.
"I hope the world of the play feels both ancient and modern,"
says the director. "At the time it
takes place -- 1885 -- the Balkans were steeped in turmoil and kind of feeling
about in the dark to find out what sort of countries they would be. Just like today."
Meanwhile, on
the other end of
"I like
strong-minded women," says Evans-O'Connor, singer/director who does
double-duty in outreach and education for San Diego Comic Opera and the San
Diego Opera, "but not feminism at the expense of all men." The title character in “La Perichole”, the
fiery young street singer, is "strong and smart, but not conniving. She teaches the Spanish viceroy a valuable
lesson... Maybe it's my homage to the
Nobody is
taking advantage of the two strong-willed women who are making their mark on
Both women
agree that the doors are opening more slowly for female writers of plays,
operas and operettas, and that's where the future of the theater lies. But that's another story for another
month.....
©1993
Patté Productions Inc.