Terry Teachout's Blog, page 141
August 16, 2012
TT: Clueless in Verona
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If any Shakespeare play is in need of a nice long vacation, it's "Romeo and Juliet." Everybody knows it--or pretends to--and so any company that dares to revive it must find a way to make it new. What's more, "Romeo and Juliet" is done so often that many of the most logical approaches to freshening the play's familiarities are themselves in danger of becoming creaky clichés....
"Romeo and Juliet," however, turns out to be an infinitely renewable artistic resource. If you cast it right, act it straight and stage it as though it really were new, the miracle will repeat itself for the millionth time--as it does in Christopher V. Edwards' thoroughly satisfying Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival version. This is, to be sure, a conceptual production, but the concept is both simple and sensible: Mr. Edwards has staged the first half of "R & J" in the light-hearted manner of a teen-flick romcom, stripping away the portentous foreshadowing and playing the plot for laughs. Romeo (Carl Howell) is charmingly callow, Juliet (Angela Janas) gawky and eager, and they haven't the slightest idea of what they're getting into....It's easy to forget that the world is full of people who have yet to see any Shakespeare play. Were such a benighted soul placed in my charge, Hudson Valley's "Romeo and Juliet" might well be our first stop, after which we'd come back the next night for Terrence O'Brien's superlative production of "Love's Labour's Lost." Mr. O'Brien, Hudson Valley's artistic director, has a knack for staging Shakespeare's "problem" plays so deftly that you come away wondering why anyone ever found them difficult. That's what happens here.
"Love's Labour's Lost" is the most extravagantly artificial of Shakespeare's comedies, a pun-encrusted farrago of frenetic wordplay that lacks the emotional immediacy of his better-known plays. To make it work, the director must keep the top of verbal virtuosity spinning at all times, which can leave the viewer exhausted. Not so this time around. Mr. O'Brien never lets us forget that "Love's Labour's Lost" is ultimately about love, not wit....
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Read the whole thing here .
TT: So you want to see a show?
Here's my list of recommended Broadway, off-Broadway, and out-of-town shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows favorable reviews (if sometimes qualifiedly so) in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.
BROADWAY:
• Bring It On (musical, G, closes Jan. 20, reviewed here)
• Evita (musical, PG-13, reviewed here)
• Once (musical, G/PG-13, all performances sold out last week, reviewed here)
OFF BROADWAY:
• Avenue Q (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, reviewed here)
• The Fantasticks (musical, G, suitable for children capable of enjoying a love story, reviewed here)
• Tribes (drama, PG-13, closes Jan. 6, reviewed here)
CLOSING SOON IN CHICAGO:
• Freud's Last Session (drama, PG-13, restaging of off-Broadway production, closes Sept. 2, reviewed here)
CLOSING SOON IN MINNEAPOLIS:
• The Sunshine Boys (comedy, G, closes Sept. 2, reviewed here)
CLOSING SOON ON BROADWAY:
• The Best Man (drama, PG-13, closes Sept. 9, reviewed here)
August 15, 2012
TT: Almanac
Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Nominalist and Realist"
August 14, 2012
TT: Snapshot
(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday and Wednesday.)
TT: Almanac
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., "Ideals and Doubts"
August 13, 2012
TT: Lookback
From 2004:My friends all take vacations, and swear by them. I don't, and after due consideration I've decided to blame this idiosyncrasy on my late father, who planned the family vacations of my youth on the mistaken assumption that the point of going somewhere is to do something. An anxious, restless man, he was never much good at doing nothing, whereas it seemed self-evident to me from childhood onward that the whole point of taking a vacation was to do whatever you wanted--including nothing--whenever you wanted....
Read the whole thing here .
TT: Almanac
Bette Davis, The Lonely Life: An Autobiography
TT: Getting there
Two days ago John put on the cap and horn-rimmed glasses that Armstrong wore offstage in later life. When he broke out in Satchmo's familiar grin, my jaw dropped. "My God, you even look like him now!" I cried involuntarily. We all burst into happy laughter, then went back to work.Rehearsing a play is, needless to say, serious business, but that doesn't mean the three of us aren't spending a fair amount of time laughing. Our funniest mishap to date occurred place last week when John took his first shot at delivering Glaser's last sentence, an eight-word string of Anglo-Saxon monosyllables that The Wall Street Journal would never dream of printing. He couldn't decide which of them to stress, so he tried emphasizing one word, then another. Gordon and I got giggly on the fourth try. At that point John started to play along by repeating the sentence eight times in a row, exaggerating each word in turn. All three of us broke up, after which the stage manager wisely called for a ten-minute break.
If you saw Satchmo at the Waldorf in Orlando last fall, you know that the script contains a considerable number of four-, seven-, ten-, and twelve-letter words. The last of these words is the one that appears most frequently. I use it that way because Armstrong did--you can hear him do so ad infinitum on his private tapes--and I wanted to be as true as possible to his offstage habits of speech. Perhaps not surprisingly, John, Gordon, and I are all starting to use That Word rather more frequently than we usually do. So far we've managed to restrict it to the rehearsal room, but I now live in fear of forgetting myself and inadvertently letting it fly in public, thereby scandalizing the proper patrons of Shakespeare & Company. I hope they'll be forgiving!
I'm officially present at rehearsals so that I can make such on-the-spot script revisions as may prove necessary, but the real reason why I show up each day is to watch John and Gordon. In Rewrites, the first volume of his memoirs, Neil Simon talks about coming to rehearsals of Sweet Charity just so that he could watch Bob Fosse choreograph the dances:
I did all my rewrites at home at night and early in the morning, because I never wanted to miss a moment of watching Bob and Gwen [Verdon] work. True, much of their work was prepared in advance, but at least half was created on their feet in a rehearsal hall. Cy Coleman often sat at the piano improvising variations on the themes of the score to fit Bob's need in creating a dance. Gwen's and Bob's minds and feet worked as one, and as he was showing her a move or a step, she already knew it before he finished.
That's what it feels like for me to see these two great artists working on my play.
For me, the rehearsals of Satchmo at the Waldorf have been a kind of theatrical finishing school. I did a lot of theater in high school and college, but the only course I took was a single semester of Acting 101. Until I watched Jonathan Kent staging The Letter in Santa Fe in the summer of 2009, I'd never seen a professional director at work. All I knew about the nuts and bolts of what they do was what I'd read in books, and anybody who knows anything about theater is well aware that there's a yawning gap between theory and practice.
The most important lesson that I've learned in Lenox is that in the rehearsal room, all intellectual concepts must be translated into the language of concrete intention. Otherwise they're nothing more than clever chit-chat. It does no good to tell an actor that you had Goethe or Proust in mind when you wrote a particular scene, any more than it's helpful for a conductor to spend ten minutes explaining the underlying philosophy of the slow movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony to a roomful of bored musicians. If you're a director, you have to tell the actor what to do and explain why his character is doing it--or, better yet, get him to tell you.
Similarly, every movement that an actor makes on stage must be motivated. If you don't have a reason to sit down in a chair, then the audience won't get anything out of your having done so. The worst thing you can do on stage, bar none, is to wander aimlessly.
The second most important lesson that I've learned is that every line of a play must (in Gordon's words) "move the ball down the field." When a play goes static, it goes dead. If you let the audience get ahead of you, they'll start to get bored, and boredom can ripple throughout a theater in a matter of minutes. Your job is to keep the action moving by constantly charging it with...yes, concrete intention. What does the hero want? How does he go about trying to get it? What stands between him and his goal? That's what makes a play. All else is commentary, and must be ruthlessly pared away.Yes, this is elementary stuff, but even the most experienced writers, as any honest playwright will tell you, are forever forgetting the basics of their craft. What's more, there's a big difference between having read about it and knowing how to do it. Kenneth Tynan once quipped that a critic is "a man who knows the way but can't drive the car."
The first draft of Satchmo at the Waldorf was a map. The version that we're rehearsing in Lenox this week is--I hope--a journey.
August 12, 2012
TT: Just because
(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday and Wednesday.)
TT: Almanac
Thomas Carlyle, "On the Choice of Books"
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