THEATRE REVIEWS:
“MEMOIR” at The Globe Theatres &
"TOSCA" at San Diego Opera
KPBS
AIRDATE: April 5, 2002
When I was a kid, if my
sisters and I got overly theatrical or melodramatic (a very frequent
occurrence), my mother would sarcastically invoke Sarah Bernhardt (actually,
she'd call us 'Sarah Heartburn'). The acclaimed Parisian thespian was known for
her excesses -- both on and off the stage. D.H. Lawrence considered her acting
"the incarnation of violent emotion." She was a legend in her time,
and in many ways, still is -- one of the theater's original divas. Many star
vehicles were created just for her, including Victorien Sardou's "La
Tosca," the 1887 play that served as source material for Puccini's opera.
So now, in addition to that melodic classic, performed by San Diego Opera, we
have the Globe's "Memoir," Canadian John Murrell's 1976 play by about
the last days of The Divine Sarah.
It's 1922, and she's
trying to get her faithful secretary, Georges Pitou, to help write down her
memories. Make that reminiscences seen through the fog of age, self-deception
and reinvention of history. She forces the devoted Pitou to role-play her fuzzy
recollections, becoming her Maman or the Mother Superior at the convent she
tried to enter in her youth, or her drug-addled husband, or the gruff promoter
of her American tours, even Oscar Wilde. These re-enactments are actually the
most entertaining interactions in the play. This two-hander recalls Ronald
Harwood's "The Dresser," a much stronger play about an aging actor
and his subservient underling. There, it's Sir; here, it's Madame. In both
cases, the ardor of the sometimes-abused subordinate is palpable. But Harwood's
characters are more multi-dimensional and though smaller and fictional, more
interesting.
By all accounts,
Bernhardt was captivating and charismatic. But the play only shows the faded
queen and just gives snippets of her trials and triumphs. Not enough to inform
or thoroughly engage. Globe veterans Katherine McGrath and Jonathan McMurtry
are delightful together, obviously relishing their dramatic duet. But we don't
get any real feel for the power of the actress, even (or especially) as she
recalls lines from her classic portrayals of Phedre and Hamlet. The piece drags
on, and the mutual jibes at memory loss become tiresome. Ultimately, the play
doesn't satisfy, though the setting is gorgeous.
Much more gratifying is
the current production of "Tosca," which also boasts resplendent
sets. Fortunately, the singing is powerful, too. The three principals are an
excellent vocal match -- rich, full-voiced Russian soprano Galina Gorchakova as
the doomed diva, tenor Richard Leech as her artist-lover and baritone Kimm
Julian as the evil Scarpia. Ian Campbell's direction is deliciously attentive
to detail. As the melodrama rises in the second half, the acting elevates to
match the singing. The diva may die, but here, the memory lingers on.
©2002 Patté Productions
Inc