THEATRE REVIEWS:
“THE TROJAN WOMEN” at the Old Globe &
"GOING TO ST. IVES" at La Jolla Playhouse
KPBS
AIRDATE: SEPTEMBER 22, 2000
It's been a great week
for women in the theater… well, sort of. Some wonderfully juicy roles for
actresses to sink their teeth into. But all the women they portray are
tyrannized -- suffering at the hands of men. In an ancient play, they are the
spoils of war; they've lost brothers and fathers and sons, and they face a
future as servants or concubines to their captors. In a modern play, they have
been forced to forfeit their only son. But these two dramas, though they span
2500 years, share more than their themes. Both were written by men, directed by
women. Both productions are heartfelt, earnest, intense. But in both cases,
little trust is given to the audience. There is no subtext, no subtlety; every
thought, idea and feeling is spelled out, demonstrated, declaimed. There's no
breathing-space; little room for post-show discussions, because everything has
been said. As if we couldn't see for ourselves the timelessness of the message,
the relevance to our lives. At our two Tony Award-winning theaters, we get
magnificent performances in unsatisfying productions.
At the Old Globe, local
scholar/philanthropist Marianne McDonald has adapted "The Trojan
Women," Euripides' fierce, anti-war tragedy, for a modern audience,
unnecessarily inserting references to TV and cellphones. And if, as in her
program notes, the director, Seret Scott, was informed by her memories of the
Vietnam War, can't she leave it to us to see through to the commonalities? Must
the Greek victors be dressed in U.S military fatigues? Must the set be a
chain-link and barbed wire POW camp, overseen by the enormous head of a Greek
god? Unfortunately, I felt assaulted less by the words than by the concept.
At the La Jolla
Playhouse, playwright Lee Blessing is back for the fifth time, with another of
his two-handers, a talky and often pedantic piece. "A Walk in the
Woods," which centered on an American and a Russian, was nominated for the
Pulitzer Prize. In "Going to St. Ives," we have an English eye
surgeon, and the mother of an African dictator. The whole endeavor seems too mannered,
too forced. After a very slow unraveling of the story, after several pivotal
plotpoints and truly gripping moments, nicely directed by Maria Mileaf, the
play just trickles off emptily at the end. But Annie Smart's set is gorgeous;
she is gifted with color, here offering periwinkle in the English sitting-room
and rich earthtones for the modest house in an unnamed, subSaharan country.
But what really stands
out in both these productions is the performances, masterful portrayals of
women under siege: at the Globe, Randy Danson as the bereft but still-regal
queen Hecuba; Rayme Cornell as her cursed and crazed daughter Cassandra;
Jennifer Regan as the hopeless and helpless Andromache. At La Jolla Playhouse,
we get beautifully nuanced performances from L. Scott Caldwell and Amy Morton.
In both cases, the drama
and the tragedy are gut-wrenching. But what these productions say about the
current state of theater and its audience expectations is, for me, far more
troubling and disturbing.
©2000 Patté Productions
Inc.