THEATRE REVIEW:
“HEDDA GABLER” at the Old Globe
Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: June 14, 1995
“Hedda Gabler”
is many things: a summation of the
dramatic theories and skills of the great nineteenth century Norwegian
playwright Henrik Ibsen, considered the father of modern drama. To many, it is a perfectly structured play. It centers on a contradictory and
unforgettable character. It is a
problem play, perhaps a social criticism.
But it is not a melodrama.
In its current,
multicultural airing at the Old Globe, it is a trifle, with overblown
performances and inappropriate histrionics, completely devoid of any subtlety
or subtext. Every decision here is
wrong, except perhaps the costuming.
The set is early Pier 1, with low-budget lawn furniture sprinkled around
what should be a starkly elegant Norwegian sitting room. The lighting is uninspired; the music is
fraught with dark, portentous strings.
And every directorial move is misconceived.
Where there
should be a seething undertone, everything bubbles up on the surface. Instead of playing a spoiled, impulsive,
insecure, frightened, desperate, tormented manipulator, CCH Pounder has reduced
Hedda to a monstrous harridan, a cruel and beastly woman who premeditates all
the destruction she brings on others, and delights in it. There are no contradictions in this
character: she is perfectly
hateful. She never shows any fear or
vulnerability, or any other motivation for hurting others except for sheer
ruthlessness. Pounder is playing
“Medea.” Why anyone would be attracted to her is beyond me.
But all the men
onstage are, from the malevolent Judge Brack, who, in Ron Glass’ portrayal, is
only missing a humongous waxed mustache to twirl, to Hedda’s former lover and
lifelong flame, Eilert Lovborg. In the
hands of the talented John Campion, who used to be known as Mario Arrambide,
Lovborg is merely a lunatic. He is a
brute (Campion seems to be reprising his brilliant star turn in “The Hairy Ape”
from the La Jolla Playhouse a few seasons back). You’d never believe he would or could compete academically with
Hedda’s bookish husband; he shows no sign of intelligence, only borderline insanity. There is no particular reason the hapless,
here rather colorless Thea Elvsted would be attracted to him, let alone Hedda
herself. He comes on like a demented
Neanderthal.
As Hedda’s
husband, the supposedly boring academic, George Tesman, John Leonard Thompson
is highly spirited. He fairly leaps
across the stage, deftly defying all her descriptions of him -- as well as
Ibsen’s. If Hedda really had a husband
this lively, maybe she wouldn’t be so bored and miserable. Even the maid, Berte, is poorly motivated in
this production. Only Patricia Fraser,
as Tesman’s Aunt Julia, seems to be in the right play. Everyone else is in a different piece.
Most heinous of
all, the opening and closing scenes hammer home the absurd theme that to Hedda,
Happiness is a Warm Gun. Two deaths at
the end just weren’t enough. Someone
should’ve killed off this whole production.
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1995 Patté Productions Inc.