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A CurtainUp Review
Amazons and Their Men


Nazi cinema exploited the limitations of human imagination, seeking to obliterate first-person consciousness and to replace it with a universal third person.—Eric Renschler, The Memory of Man.
Rebecca Wisocky
Rebecca Wisocky as The Frau
I wasn't free to see this during the initial press performances, yet there were any number of reasons to make this a case of better late than never: I was intrigued enough by Jordan Harrison's Doris to Darlene to want to see more work by this imaginative writer. . . I've long been a fan of Rebecca Wisocky's work. . .I'm a sucker for Nazi era stories, so a play based on the controversial German film maker Leni Riefenstahl is a real magnet and Wisocky as Riefenstall brought to mind her memorable appearance in Werner Rainer Fassbeinder's The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant.

Now that I've seen Harrison's vision for a play based on Riefenstahl, my impression that he is a playwright to watch stands. The theme of using the beauty of art as a reason to blind oneself to encroaching evil outside the theater (or in Riefenstahl's case, the film set) is well worth exploring, and Riefenstahl is a fascinating figure through whom to channel this theme.

With just four actors and one key prop, a moveable platform, the play quickly and intriguingly establishes the core theme: In its larger context, the German citizens' denial of the evil infecting their nation — and more specifically, a Nazi-connected grandiose filmmaker's delusion that art conquers all. (While no record was ever found of Riefenstahl's party membership, she was very much a Hitler favorite).

Wisocky is a commanding presence as Riefenstahl, known here as The Frau. She's domineering and somewhat scary, but also funny. While no specific mention is made of Triumph of the Will, her famous 1934 propaganda film about a Nazi rally in Nuremberg, the Nazi movement has clearly advanced closer to the 1939 invasion of Poland. Ghetto Jews are forced to wear yellow stars and have difficulty finding jobs. The Frau's work for the Nazis is alluded to by a distant figure (probably Joseph Goebels) who keeps sending her telegrams bringing news of the escalating Nazi war machine and urging her return to propaganda film making. But the Frau wants to make a beautiful, romantic film and so determinedly ignores the telegrams and the danger to which they allude. Instead she moves forward with casting and directing herself in a film version of Heinrich von Kleist's play, Penthesilea, (an actual Riefenthal project) about the Amazon Queen's love for and battle with the Greek hero, Achilles.

The Frau hires a Jewish actor (Brian Sgambati) from the ghetto to play Achilles, partly because he's good but not good enough to outshine her, but also because he comes cheap. When the Frau's sister (Heidi Schreck), a character aptly dubbed The Extra since that's how she's often cast, doesn't work out as Achilles loyal companion Patrocles, the Frau hires the young man (Gio Perez) who delivers those telegrams about the growing Nazi menace. Since he's a Romanian from a Gypsy family, and both he and the play's hero fall passionately in love, that makes the film crew a mini-composite of people persecuted by the Nazis. While jealousy seems to prompt The Frau's outraged reaction to her actors' backstage affair, the events that follow become a parallel in miniature of the Nazis' victimization of Jews, homosexuals and gypsies.

Wisocky is well supported by her small cast, especially by downtown regular Heidi Schreck, who also serves as the play's narrator and conscience. The audience addressing narration is often in the third person, as in Harrison's From Doris to Darlene. It's a technique that works well with Ken Rus Schmoll's simple but highly effective stylized staging. However, with The Extra turning out to be part of the homosexual subplot, that subplot ends up overwhelming the core theme about art being immune to evil no matter how closely it encroaches on the lives of artists as well as ordinary people. In the end, this fascinating, beautifully staged and acted play is as much, if not more, worth seeing for its style than its substance.

AMAZONS AND THEIR MEN
Written by Jordan Harrison
Directed by Ken Rus Schmoll, based on the life of German film maker Leni Riefenstahl.
Cast: Rebecca Wisocky, Brian Sgambati, Gio Perez and Heidi Schreck.
Sets and projections: Sue Rees
Costumes: Kirche Leigh Zeile
Lighting: Garin Marschall
Sound: Leah Gelpe
Running time: 75 minutes
Clubbed Thumb at The Ohio Theatre, 66 Wooster Street btwn. Spring and Broome, www.clubbedthumb.org 212.352.3101
From 1/03/08; opening 1/05/08; closing 1/26/08.
Thursdays — Tuesdays at 8 PM $25/ $20 for students.


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