THEATRE REVIEW:
“THE COMPLEAT WORKS OF WLLM
SHKSPR (ABRIDGED)” at the Old Globe Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: July 24, 1996
You really
don’t have to know -- or love -- Shakespeare to appreciate the antic insanity
of “The Compleat Works of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged),” but, as the old Borscht Belt
joke goes, “It vouldn’t hoit.”
On the most
superficial level (and there is plenty of that -- don’t look for any genuine
depth or incisive commentary here) -- it’s raucous, riotous and just plain,
goofy fun.
But if you’re
familiar with Shakespeare’s comedies, for example, you will certainly
appreciate all 16 or so of them being rolled into one grand miniplay, with
multiple sets of twins being duped by an incomprehensible series of mistaken
identities. It’s called, ‘The Comedy of
Two Well-Measured Gentlemen Lost in the Merry Wives of Venice on a Midsummer’s
Twelfth Night in Winter.” Or,
“Cymbeline Taming Pericles the Merchant in the Tempest of Love As Much As you
Like It for Nothing.” Or (and I wish
they’d quit while they were ahead) ‘The Love Boat Goes to Verona.”
If you know
history, even if you don’t know Shakespeare’s histories, you’ll get a
big kick out of all the Bard’s historical plays and all their multiple parts
distilled down to a fast-paced football game with the crown being tossed about
from monarch to monarch. As happens so
often in this production, the physical comedy gets so furious that the words
are often swallowed up in the mêlée.
But the rap version of “Othello” changes the pace a bit, and still gets
the laughs.
I could’ve have
lived very well, thank you, laughing all the way, without the biography mix-up
between Shakespeare and Hitler, or the overly-long, Three Stooges meets Benny
Hill rendition of “Romeo and Juliet.”
But these are
mere poetic quibbles. As puerile and
adolescent as the humor gets, these three actors are extremely talented, as
each showed in a serious recitation of at least one Shakespearean
soliloquy. These guys are good. Never
mind that the humor descends to the level of butt-cracks and phallic
symbols. In truth, so did
Shakespeare’s.
And this isn’t
some fly-by-night romp. It’s been 15
years in the writing and performance, starting as a 20-minute lark at
Renaissance street fairs and working its way up to 37 plays in under 2 hours at
the renowned Old Globe Theatre. Boy,
between this and “American Buffalo,” Globe audiences are getting a bellyful of
off-color language. By and large, they
seem to be loving it.
Anyway, the
upcoming convention has given the writers a chance to update again. Bob Dole is invoked several times, and
there’s reference to Prince, Michael Jackson, George Bush’s vomit, Baywatch,
the Clintons’ billing records, Kathi Lee’s sweatshops and the ever-popular
Jenny Craig.
The
Atlas-wielded globe atop the set is a very funny bit. Chris Duva, who looks and talks like a surfer dude, is boffo as
all the Bard’s broads. John Ellison
Conlee looks like John Goodman, but is faster and funnier. And Jon Patrick
Walker is a damn credible Hamlet, among other leading men. We don’t really need all the exposition and
explanation. Just let these guys
loose -- which is basically (in a
controlled way) what director and co-writer Jess Winfield has done -- and let
them make marvelous mockery out of Masterpiece Theatre and academic
pomposity.
And don’t you
dare leave your seat before the encore.
After a seriously reduced “Hamlet,” there’s a yet-more condensed version
and then... they do it backwards. That
alone is worth the price of admission.
By the way, if
you heard these inspired lunatics when they were here with me in the KPBS
studio, go see the show. It’s even
funnier with all the sight-gags.
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.