/02/98">
A CurtainUp Berkshires Review: A Room Of One's Own
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Shakespeare & Company has a penchant for making intriguing plays from books
and other literary artifacts by and about women -- the sort of women one might hope to meet at a
gathering held in the parlor of Edith Wharton's estate before it became the Wharton theater.
Some of these women even rate more than one play, like Virginia Woolf who showed up five
years ago in <I> Virginia</I> and now closes out the busy season with a brief run of Garland Wright's
adaptation of Woolf's famous feminist manifesto, <I>A Room of One's Own.
</I>
<br><br>
This literate and witty essay which grew out of two lectures Woolf delivered at Cambridge
University in 1928, has already been dramatized on public television and recorded on audio
cassette. If its ranking at the Amazon book store is any indication, it's also still widely read
(see links at end) even though its advice -- (acquire monetary wealth and a room of your own or you'll never have a place of your own in fiction -- or any other important cultural niche) -- is hardly revolutionary as we are on the brink of the next millenium.
To make the impact it once did, an adapter would have to be as imaginative as Woolf
was when she imagined the lives of women, (i.e. Shakespeare's sister), had they not been
corseted by the customs of their times. With Hillary Clinton's visit to the Mount as part of her
preservation project still fresh in memory, a meeting between Woolf and the First Lady
might have raised some issues not quite so much of the <I>been there, done that </I> genre. An additional character, <B>any</B>
additional character, on stage would also prevent the problems inherent in this as so many of the
monologues that have of late become a major theatrical genre.
<br><br>
Still, <B>A Room of One's Own</B> , is alive with sharply observed opinions and, since it has as its star Tod Randolph, it
will undoubtedly sell out its limited run (in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if it returned for a
longer engagement in summer '99). With her expressive face, mellifluous voice and
commanding stage presence, Ms Randolph is one of those actresses who could hold your
attention even if she were reading from the telephone book. While the device of recording Ms.
Randolph's voice to express her thoughts does little to sever this monoplay from
its lecture connection, the actress does have a lot more than the telephone book or an ordinary
speaker's lecture to work with. This is after all author of <I> Mrs. Dalloway, Jacob's Room,</I>
and <I>To the Lighthouse.</I>
<br><br></BLOCKQUOTE></BLOCKQUOTE>
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<B>LINKS</B><br>
In case you can't make it to The Mount, this link to a paperback edition and two audio cassettes of Woolf's essay.
<br><br>
<A
HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0156787334/curtaianewyorkthA/">
A Room Of One's Own, </A> 114 page Harcourt Brace paperback, with introduction by Mary
Gordon. <BR>
<A
HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0898458021/curtaianewyorkthA/">
Claire Bloom narrates Woolf's essay</A>
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<table class = credit border="0" >
<tr>
<td bgcolor="#CCCCCC">A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN
Adapted from Virginia Woolf
By Patrick Garland
Directed by Daniela Varon
<BR>
Starring: Tod Randolph <BR>
Sets: Patrick Brennan <BR>
Costumes: Alison Ragland <BR>
Lights: Stephen Ball <BR>
Sound: Mark Huang<BR>
Wharton Theatre, The Mount
2 Plunket St., Lenox, MA
(413/637-3353<BR>
9/01/98-9/06/98;
Reviewed 9/02/98 by <A HREF="elybio.html">Elyse
Sommer</A>
</TR>
</TABLE>
<br><br>
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HREF="mailto:esommer@pipeline.com">esommer@pipeline.com</A>
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© 1998, Elyse Sommer.
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