THEATRE
REVIEW:
Published in Gay and Lesbian
Times September 19, 2002
**HIGHLY RECOMMENDED/BEST BET
Some call it Shakespeare's
"Odyssey." In "Pericles," the title character spends a long
time at sea, journeying to many lands, does battle, is shipwrecked, finds and
loses a wife, has and leaves a daughter, grieves inconsolably and winds up back
at home. Like Odysseus, Pericles is a man cast adrift in the world, and through
his experiences comes to know good and evil, love, friendship, kinship,
responsibility and most important, himself.
The play is rarely performed, hard to
categorize, and doesn't appear in the all-important First Folio of
Shakespeare's works, probably because it's thought to have been a collaborative
effort, not to have been written by The Bard alone. Over the course of the
play, spanning the decades from youth to late middle age, the fictional Prince
Pericles of Tyre expands his perception: he learns what it means to live in
this capricious world, and he is shown various versions of the best and worst
in basic human relationships: husband and wife, father and daughter, servant
and master.
Although Shakespeare's title character
bears little resemblance to the historical Pericles, an Athenian statesman and
patron of the arts, the play underscores a major philosophy of Greek tragedy
and society: the inevitability of Fate. Pericles is, in fact, the first of
Shakespeare's main characters not to try to challenge his destiny. He is
buffeted by the seas and winds of fortune, acted upon, rather than controlling
the action, comparing himself to a tennis ball on a "vast tennis
court." In the end, it is Diana, the virgin goddess, who terminates his
suffering and provides the happily-ever-after.
The play is a fairy tale, almost a
dream. And the new Globe production, the first "Pericles" ever at the
venerable theater, is aptly magical and magnificent. Ralph Funicello's
majestic, marble-columned set, with its marvelous sculptured friezes, serves as
backdrop to the subtle little transformations that transport us to a wide range
of cultures and locales, from Turkey to North Africa. Behind a stately
staircase is the suggestion of the sea, destroyer and facilitator. Linda Cho's
gorgeous costumes help clarify who's who and who's where. But it's the
masterful, detailed, wildly imaginative direction of Darko Tresnjak that makes
the play sing, and makes the story crisp and clear, as crystalline as the
language, skillfully spoken by a talented, chameleon cast, a tight, skilled
ensemble that changes seemingly effortlessly from high-born to low, monsters to
saviors.
As Gower, the narrator of this mythical
tale, Ned Schmidtke is a wise, white-bearded, Moses-looking guide who steers us
through the action and moves the story along. At the center of it all is
Michael James Reed, an amiable, admirable, lovable Pericles, who deserves his
adoring wife (Emmelyn Thayer) and gifted, exquisite daughter, played with
poignance and intelligence by they lovely Anna Belknap.
This may not be Shakespeare's most
revered play, but it's is one of the Globe's most glorious productions, and the
brilliant young Tresnjak should be invited back soon, to take us on another
magical journey.
"Pericles" runs through October 6, outdoors on the
Globe's Festival Stage in Balboa Park; 619-.
©2002 Patté
Productions Inc.