THEATRE REVIEW:
“MACBETH” at the Old Globe
Theatre & “12 ANGRY JURORS” by the SD Black Ensemble Theatre at Ensemble
Arts Theatre & “PHANTOM” at the Moonlight Amphitheatre & “CAROUSEL” at
the Orange County Performing Arts Center
KPBS AIRDATE: September 18, 1996
Dark musicals
and disturbing drama -- I’d say it’s a great week in the theater. But there’s one that got away -- and I only
hope it somehow makes the trip to San Diego.
The fabulous, five Tony Award-winning Royal National Theatre production
of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Carousel” came to Los Angeles and it’s now at the
Orange County Performing Arts Center, but it hasn’t made it down here.
Magnificently designed and directed, and equally beautifully sung,
this 1945 tear-jerker has upbeat songs and terrific dancing mixed with
after-life experiences, spousal abuse, single motherhood and good folks gone
bad. Distressing, timeless and not to be
missed.
Speaking of
restricted time-frames, you only have this weekend to see the real “Phantom.” It’s not Andrew Lloyd Webber monstrous
spectacle, though it was written at exactly the same time -- 1985; but it’s
much, much better. Written by Arthur
Kopit and Maury Yeston, this musical is also based on Gaston Leroux’s 1910
romantic melodrama, “The Phantom of the Opera.”
But “Phantom” has a fleshed-out story, lilting and non-repetitive music,
credible, motivated characters and an actual dramatic arc. Plus, it doesn’t take itself so ridiculously
seriously.
This Phantom,
spectacularly sung by Sean Smith, he of the spider-like fingers, actually has a
sense of humor. He’s a true dramatic
character. And Christina Saffran is his
perfect counterpart, an angel-voiced pixie as Christine. Sure, the melodrama is still palpable, but
this masked man has a childhood and a heartbreaking reunion with his
father. The touching duet, “You’re My
Own,” is a man’s moment, a rarity for a musical. It plays out a real male fantasy: having your father say he loves you, and
being loved unconditionally by your mother and your mate. Sniffles and standing ovations up at
Moonlight Amphitheatre, and deservedly so.
The choreography may not be inspired, and the scenery may be downright
cheesy, with those klunky curtain-drops, but the production, with its huge cast
and strong musical backup, is wonderful.
Just as dark
and eerie is the Globe’s open-air “Macbeth.”
The witches set the supernatural tone here, severing a snake at the
outset, and reappearing periodically to observe the proceedings, as the doomed
Thane ascends politically and descends spiritually. Victor Garber is a thinking-man’s Macbeth,
less a warrior than a ruminator. He
handles the language well, being, along with the multi-roled Richard Easton,
one of the only actors who doesn’t declaim and emote. Joan McMurtrey is a far less satisfying Lady
M. Although her sleepwalking scene is
strong, there is little believable buildup to it. The production is bleak, with its dim
lighting, dusky plaids and wailing bagpipes, but the outdoor setting
underscores the most effective scenes, those unearthly, spectral visions of
ghosts and daggers and even Hecate, the rarely seen goddess of the
underworld. Where Nicholas Martin’s
production may falter linguistically, its soars ethereally.
Much more
down-to-earth, but equally unnerving, is “Twelve Angry People,” a co-production
of San Diego Black Ensemble Theatre and Ensemble Arts Theatre. Joe Powers has adapted an adaptation of
Reginald Rose’s award-winning 1956 jury-room drama, “Twelve Angry Men.” Powers’ casting and direction are more
forceful than his equal-opportunity title.
Like another
jury-room drama, the Globe’s recent “Voir Dire,” this play has its predictable
setups and caricatures, but it is far more dramatic, realistic and
engaging. Here, the case at hand is a teenager
accused of murdering his father. T.J.
Johnson, Walter Murray and Lamont Thompson give particularly strong
performances. The women work less well.
But the issues raised, about race, class, prejudice and the laborious jury
process, make you queasy all over again, in the wake of the O.J. trial. That case -- and this play -- continue to
prey on our collective conscience. Good
theater gets under your skin.
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.