THEATRE PREVIEW
LAMB'S PLAYERS' “DR. FAUSTUS”
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine October
2001
Okay, quick. Name the Seven Deadly Sins. If you can't,
well, help is on the way. All seven make an anthropomorphic appearance at
Lamb's Players Theatre, to tempt Dr.
Faustus..
In the 16th century masterwork by
Christopher Marlowe, Dr Faustus is a scholar and sorcerer of sorts, who seeks
unlimited power through expansive knowledge. To help him make what's come to be
called his 'Faustian bargain,' the Devil sends in the Seven Deadly Sins (Greed,
Envy, Pride, Lust, Gluttony, Anger, Sloth -- did you get 'em all??). Faust's
boundless longings serve as a cautionary tale for anyone who really thinks he
can 'have it all.'
Lamb's Players artistic director Robert Smyth
adores Marlowe's morality tale, which he adapted and directed two decades ago
Now he's anxious to learn from it anew, directing his latest adaptation.
" It's a visceral, gutsy play," he says,
"Enormously intriguing and influential."
Dr. Faustus, who may or may not have been a real
German scientist/alchemist, sells his soul to Mephistopheles for money, power
and fame. In so doing, he influenced countless creations to come -- from
Goethe's "Faust" to the opera by Gounod, from "Dracula" to Damn Yankees and "The Little
Mermaid," from "The Devil and Tom Walker" (Washington Irving,
1800) to "The Devil and Daniel Webster" (Stephen Vincent Benet, 1936)
to the 1972 X-rated film "The Devil in Miss Jones."
Selling out, says Smyth, is an eternally relevant
issue. "You can always say, 'We're a corrupt, materialistic society.' But
go back to any time in history, and people were claiming the same thing."
The play lasts, he asserts, because "it deals
with the Large Questions: What is power? Where does it really reside? How much
can we bargain for before we sell our self? What is the core of the self? And what happens once you've given it
away?
" I love Faustus," says the shy,
soft-spoken Smyth. "We can identify with him. We long for and yell at him.
And Mephistopheles is not a villain. If he's played like a scheming devil, you
miss all the irony. He's very smooth, very relaxed. What's important in the
play is what you see is not necessarily what's true."
And what seems to be a deep, dark message-laden
piece of theater certainly isn't only that. Marlowe's classic is laced with
comedy, sometimes of a rather low variety.
"In Elizabethan work," Smyth explains,
"the comic character pokes fun at the main character. The sense of
slapstick is juxtaposed with the deeper, philosophical issues. The play has
comedy, tragedy, history, fantasy -- something for everyone!"
It's a perfect ensemble piece, and Smyth is making
excellent use of his well-oiled collaborative performance and design team. The
eight actors portray dozens of characters, and the director's wife, Deborah
Gilmour Smyth, composed the ambitious score, an eclectic mix of electric guitar
and Gregorian chant.
This is a celebrational event all around; it
closes the Lambs' 30th year and marks the company's 200th
production. The group started as a street ensemble, an offshoot of a drama
class at Bethel College in St. Paul, MN. Realizing that the street theater
season was pitifully brief in the Midwest, they moved to San Diego in 1972 and
began touring to colleges, parks and prisons nationwide.
Smyth joined up in 1976 and the resident acting
company was established in 1978. There are now 11 full-time paid performers in
the company, in addition to 31 other employees. "A quarter of the company
has been together more than 15 years," says Smyth. "Another quarter
weren't born when we started."
The troupe is unique in many ways. Lamb's is the only
year-round acting ensemble in the Southwest; there are only two or three like
it in the country. The annual budget of $4million qualifies it as the third
largest professional theater company in the county (after the Globe and La
Jolla Playhouse) and one of the top 50 in the U.S. The group maintains two
theaters (in Coronado and National City), and also produces regularly at the
Lyceum Theatre in Horton Plaza, the Hotel Del Coronado and California Center
for the Arts-Escondido. Their long-term dream is now a four-year plan: to
acquire a new 300-500 seat space downtown.
Lamb's is also distinctive in that 75% of its
annual income comes from ticket sales (the average is 54%). "So that means
we have to constantly be producing." They mount 9-12 mainstage shows a
year, many of which Smyth directs or performs in. He is fiercely proud of his
Lambs, and bristles when they're dismissed as a religious theater group.
"Much of our company has a faith perspective.
It's a sensibility. We're not a church and we don't do prayers or
proselytizing. Over time, we've grown a great deal, as people and as artists.
Last June, a San Diego Magazine Readers' Poll named us Best Performing Arts
Group in the county. The media should stop pretending we're this little
Christian thing in the corner of the county.
"We're an ensemble, but we're not
insular," he asserts. Over the years, the company has, in fact, hired more
than 500 San Diego actors.
In planning each season, Smyth doesn't like to
think of his theatrical fare of musicals, dramas, classics and new plays as any
kind of 'formula' -- he sees it more
like a restaurant menu. "It's easy to sell pie and ice cream," he
says. "But we're also interested in serving meat and potatoes. Some people
think they only want pie and ice cream but they wind up enjoying the meat and
potatoes just as much."
Dr.
Faustus has plenty to chew on, but you also get your just
desserts. So come for the pie; stay for the meat.
©2001 Patté Productions Inc.