THEATRE REVIEW:
''FORTINBRAS'' at the La
Jolla Playhouse
KPBS AIRDATE: July 1, 1991
When was the last time you saw
"Hamlet"? Whatever details
you may or may not recall, surely you remember that laughter was not your primary
response to the melancholy Dane. But
guffaws greet the nattering Norwegian, "Fortinbras," the hero of Lee
Blessing's new play, a comic sequel to "Hamlet" currently having its
world premiere at the La Jolla Playhouse.
When the play opens, the stage is strewn
with familiar bodies: King Claudius,
Queen Gertrude and proud Laertes, and there's Hamlet, breathing his last breath
and making his friend Horatio promise to tell the true story of the destruction
of the entire Danish royal house. Just
as Hamlet dies, and Horatio utters those unforgettable Shakespearean lines
about a cracking noble heart and flights of angels, in swaggers Fortinbras,
breaking the mood, talking slangy, present-day English, and calling the whole
proceedings to a hilarious halt.
And we're off, on a whirlwind, Mr. Toad's
ride of high and low comedy, subtle and not-so-subtle "Hamlet"
in-jokes, pratfalls and vaudeville routines, and a never-ending series of dying
people re-appearing as ghosts and turning the lives of the living inside out.
When Fortinbras becomes king, he heralds a
great Norwenish -- or Dane-wegian -- Age.
But he doesn't like the Hamlet death-story at all. He wants to create a new myth, an explanation
of the royal Danish downfall that makes him look important. He comes up with the idea of a Polish spy
that engineered the whole thing.
Horatio is appalled. Osric is a
pawn. The only other witness, Osric is
a fawning sycophant; he'll do anything the new king says -- including pose as
the Polish spy.
Meanwhile, there are all those ghosts. Through all the laughs, Blessing gets to
make sobering statements about death.
Try this one: "Death has been my greatest disappointment. It has all the uncertainty of life and
twice the solitude." Or this:
"Whatever you're doing to prepare for death, don't
bother." Or, on a lighter note,
"You think eternity's forever?"
The fascinating thing about Blessing's
ghosts is that post-mortem, each of them is precisely the opposite of what they
were in life. Polonius is mute, for
example. Gertrude and Claudius are
overflowing with remorse. Laertes is
passive. Ophelia is a major player. But Hamlet is still plagued by inertia.
Don't think that the in-jokes mean you have
to have read "Hamlet" yesterday.
They're mostly pretty transparent, and really quite clever, though
sometimes things do get a bit silly.
But this is a wonderful inaugural event for
the spectacular new 400-seat Mandell Weiss Forum, with its Elizabethan thrust
stage. A perfect combo of the old and
the new, the classic and the modern, the serious and the humorous.
And the performances are delectable: Daniel Jenkins a delightfully adolescent
Fortinbras, the prototypical ineffectual politician. Laura Linney is a very sexual, feminist Ophelia who refuses to be
"marginal" in any version of the Hamlet story. Ralph Bruneau is a strong and steadfast
Horatio, the conscience of the thing.
As Osric, Jefferson May is his ideal foil. Don Reilly's Hamlet is attractive and intelligent, when he isn't
-- oddly -- trapped inside a TV.
Robert Brill has done it again with his
scenic design -- angular and monochromatic, set off perfectly by Susan
Hilferty's costumes -- brightly colored for the living, ashen for the
dead. Michael Roth's inventive music
and Chris Parry's lighting complement the eerie look and feel.
Director Des McAnuff was obviously having a
high time with all of this mayhem, which neatly pulls together his love of
classics and comic antics.
You have to prepare to shift out of any
mood of seriosity before you go see "Fortinbras." As the title
character says of his predecessors:
"I'm not here to finish their story; they were here to begin
mine." And so they do. To hilarious effect.
I'm Pat Launer for KPBS Radio.
©1991
Patté Productions Inc.