THEATRE PREVIEW
“THE MISER”
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine October
2005
Power,
wealth, greed, duplicity, manipulation. Sounds like a partisan account of the
state of the Union. But, more political satire than screed, those are the
themes of The Miser, written in 1668
by one of the theater’s greatest comic actor/dramatists, Molière.
While
some companies present the play as a simplistic family farce, Dominique Serrand
sees it differently. The Paris-born co-artistic director of Minneapolis’ Tony
Award-winning Théâtre de la Jeune Lune says The
Miser is “a mean play for mean times.” Molière, he says, was “very angry”
when he wrote it; his two previous satires, Tartuffe
and Dom Juan, had just been
censored. ”It’s a very funny play,” the award-winning actor/director admits,
“but it’s brutal.”
The
choice of The Miser was not random
for Serrand. “I always choose a play because of the particular time and how it
speaks to the world we live in,” he says. “Right now, we’re in miserable – or
should I say Miser-able – times.”
Serrand
and his company first came to the La Jolla Playhouse in 1993, with the West
coast premiere of their brilliant, eye-popping Children of Paradise: Shooting a Dream. Jeune Lune, which means
‘new moon’ (part of their mission is “looking for the new in the old”), is
known for its ebulliently visceral, visually striking productions. The five
co-artistic directors studied at the prestigious Lecoq School of Physical
Theatre Training in Paris. Every company effort is an ensemble work.
A
frequent collaborator, theater scholar David Ball, created the adaptation
that’s been called “audacious” and “colorfully liberal, often scatological.”
According to Serrand, “it takes some liberties, makes the ideas more
contemporary, but we didn’t add anything. The play doesn’t need to be
rewritten. Everything it has to say is right there.”
This
Jeune Lune presentation, a co-production with Boston’s American Repertory
Theatre and the Actors Theatre of Louisville, was described as “deliciously
playful yet bitterly dark.” When La Jolla Playhouse artistic director Des
McAnuff saw the production, he called it “a stunning visual feast, infusing
Molière’s masterpiece with modern vitality, [with] dazzling theatricality and a
visionary approach.“ In each city, Serrand welcomes a few local apprentices
into the cast; here, several UCSD students will work with this directorial
innovator.
Harpagon
is at the center of this biting satire. The
Miser is a paranoid penny-pincher who’s willing to sacrifice his children
for greed. When his plans to marry them off are thwarted, comedic chaos ensues
-- a whirlwind of love, loss, lies, hidden treasure and mistaken identity.
As
the Louisville Courier-Journal put it, “This is a Jeune Lune showcase. On full
display is the troupe’s extraordinary talent at weaving acrobatics and clowning
with inventive, dramatic acting, to create an exhilarating work unlike anything
else.”
[The
Théâtre de la Jeune Lune production of The
Miser runs at the La Jolla Playhouse, October 11-November 13]
©2005
Patté Productions Inc.