HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE SEARCH REVIEWS REVIEW ARCHIVES ADVERTISING AT CURTAINUP FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California New Jersey DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead |
A CurtainUp Review
Titus Andronicus
The play opens with a Boy (Frank Dolce) seated on a giant pile of plywood, silently reading Ovid’s Metamorphoses. It’s a deft theatrical stroke. The tableau not only anchors the evening but it suggests the very meat of the play. Indeed, before you exit the theater, you will get a genuine taste of Ovid’s ancient classics, with references to Tereus, Philomela, Procne, Dido and Aeneas, Priam, to mention a few. The play is not for the faint-hearted. It includes mutilations, murders, rapes, adultery, cannibalism, madness, and that’s the short list. It’s difficult to put this waking nightmare in a nutshell, but suffice it to say that it’s set in Rome, and that the main action opens with the war hero Titus being celebrated for his military victories over the Goths. Though Romans hope to make him their new emperor, he declines the honor, and urges the Tribunes to elect Saturnius. In gratitude the new emperor picks Titus’s daughter Lavinia to be his bride. But this nuptial arrangement is overturned when Saturnius’s brother Bassanius claims that Lavinia is his own. This angers Titus, who tries to seize Lavinia, but ends up killing his son Mutius, who was blocking him from reaching Lavinia. Outraged, Saturninus defiantly marries the released prisoner Tamora, Queen of the Goths. Everything that follows is an unspeakable brew of horror, blood, and revenge. The reason why the play works on a contemporary audience is that Sexton’s production fuses the archaic with the contemporary. At first blush, Brett J. Banakis’s plywood set looks very ordinary, but as the evening wears on, various panels are maneuvered, and inscribed with key textual words and visual motifs. The set itself thus become as intriguing as the pages of Ovid’s Metamorphoses. And as one deciphers the various inscriptions, one is reminded of a deep truth at the core of this play: reading and writing are the keys to a recovered humanity here. The one dubious stroke of the evening is the multiple-casting of actors. There’s certainly nothing wrong with multiple-casting, but in this rarely-staged play, with savagery afoot from the get-go, confusion can all too easily set in. A case in point is the young actor Frank Dolce who’s being asked to play a Boy, Mutius, Young Lucius, and Alarbus. Daoud Heidami is another case of an actor assigned to play enough roles . to make one’s head spin. The confusing casting is a laspe in an otherwise intelligent production and rewarding performances such as Jay O. Sanders in the title role. He displays an anthology of warring emotions and is terrific at portraying Titus’s revenge-addled madness. Also commanding is Stephanie Roth Haberle as Tamora; Jennifer Ikeda, as the gentle Lavinia; and Jacob Fishel, as the proud Saturninus. No less impressive are Ron Cephas Jones as Aaron (a rough draft of Iago) as well as William Jackson Harper and Patrick Carroll, as Tamora’s sons Demetrius and Chiron. The renowned critic Marjorie Garber astutely observes that Titus is more “a Shakespearean stepchild than a legitimate heir.” And though contemporary critics are slowly acknowledging its dramatic merits, the play is still regarded as peculiar —, and for good reason. Fortunately, Sexton has the guts to take on this bloodiest tragedy. And he does a bang-up job with it. Without aiming to defend the play, Sexton simply invites theatergoers to experience Shakespeare in the rough. He also reminds theatergoers that before he was a great playwright, he was an apprentice. The opportunity to see this rarely done play at the this series' wonderfully affordable ticket prices ends this Sunday.
|
Anything Goes Cast Recording
Our review of the show Book of Mormon -CD Our review of the show Slings & Arrows-the complete set You don't have to be a Shakespeare aficionado to love all 21 episodes of this hilarious and moving Canadian TV series about a fictional Shakespeare Company |