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PicksInSix Review: As You Like It - Writers Theatre

 
 

TOP-NOTCH ENSEMBLE SHINES AT WRITERS!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor |
Ronald Keaton

There is, up in Glencoe, a unique and striking musical adaptation of William Shakespeare's comedy masterpiece “As You Like It” playing at Writers Theatre through December 14. It's directed by Nichols Artistic Director Braden Abraham in bold, wonderfully outlandish strokes that enhance this story of lost souls who all find each other in the Forest of Arden. There is a magic in Arden. Everyone experiences a kind of ethereal conversion in attitude and outlook. Arden thus symbolizes more—a place of refuge and spiritual comfort, a haven of freedom.

There is a great deal of plot in the play that is simply too thick to fully share. Yet the adaptation by Shaina Taub and Laurie Woolery make highly accessible, in plain language, the various plot points that the Bard offers. They do not hesitate to use plain and modern language to help the storytellers along, and it's a welcome tool to have. Yes, the aficionado does miss some of that wonderful poetry, chiefly Jaques' classic, rueful rumination on life about the "seven ages of man." And then there's his sharp and welcome banter with the fool Touchstone in Shakespeare's play. But in hindsight, this approach doesn't really serve the Taub and Woolery vision. They see other ways to go.

Instead, the migration of unhappiness from the Court of Duke Frederick that ends up in Arden takes the well-known sentiment of contemporary life 'love is love is love...' to new places here. There is a company of subjects—including Duke Senior, his daughter Rosalind, his niece Celia and Touchstone—who all leave to find their romantic fortunes, banished by Frederick. One young man, Orlando, has become a kind of celebrity for his win in a wrestling match, while his brother Oliver starts out as a real bully in picking on Orlando. Through their own issues, they both end up in Arden and mend fences. And we've only just begun.

Eventually in this story, there is a literal quartet of lovers—traditional, same-sex, comic and dramatic—that celebrates their newly found love and release from the pressures of the world. The music/lyrics by Tony winner Taub are a potpourri of folk styles and rock rhythms, all filled with style and maturity. The music is played by an onstage, ragtag group, perfectly complimenting the action. Music direction came from the versatile Michael Mahler. The band is fronted by Matthew Yee as Jaques, who here becomes a kind of eloquent narrator of the action, while performing his scenes with the ever-present guitar in hand. It's an inspired placement of the character and fabulous usage of Mr. Yee's talents.

The tight cast is one of the great examples of ensemble acting this writer has seen in musical theatre in quite a while, as well as top-notch creators to represent. Everyone (and I mean everyone) has a moment or two to shine while being present in the story for the others. A few to mention, while honoring the truly professional level that all the actors reached: Benjamin Mathew's Orlando is passionate and aware of those passions at every turn. The Rosalind of Phoebe Gonzalez, whose male guise of Ganymede teaches Orlando to woo Rosalind, is charming and full. Andrea San Miguel offers a Celia ripe with energy and purpose. The great clown Touchstone lives in the capable, expert hands of Jackson Evans. There's the overbearing brother Oliver (the smooth, deep-voiced Anand Nagraj). The two Dukes—Frederick (Scott Aiello, tough and demanding) and Senior (Paul Oakley Stovall, subtle and tender)—show their family leadership constantly, even as they are on opposite sides. Chicago treasure Janet Ulrich Brooks shows up in at least three different characters, each expertly articulated. Please take note: the entire cast knows how to support each other, a refreshing and telling sign with work of such high quality. And a real bow to Mr. Abraham's direction.

Shakespeare's famous line "All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players" is not forgotten here either, and it receives a Taub examination in a song lyric:  "All the world's a stage / And everybody's in the show / No one's a pro" is the first song we hear. It's sung by Mr. Yee as Jaques, the character who speaks the original line in the Shakespeare play. Same sentiment, more accessible and, in its own way, properly applied to today.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.org.  Coming soon, his new solo play about Ben Franklin, THE FIRST EMBASSY.

PHOTO | Jenn Udoni

Writers Theatre
presents
AS YOU LIKE IT
325 Tudor Court
Glencoe, IL
through December 14


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For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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PicksInSix Review: Translations - Writers Theatre

 
 

‘Translations’—The Magic of Language Itself.
PicksInSix® Review | Ronald Keaton

It would be very easy to see “Translations,” the thick, challenging classic by the great Irish playwright Brian Friel, as a treatise about endless attacks on Irish colonialism.  After all, British soldiers travel from town to town and literally change the names of where people live to make them conform with English culture and language—by force, if necessary. And in many ways, this is true. But, as the elegant production at Writers Theatre in Glencoe that opened Friday shows in no uncertain terms, the real story here is about the magic of language itself. Writers Artistic Director Braden Abraham has deftly followed the brushstrokes of the master Mr. Friel in creating this entire world of contradiction and mystery.

This was a period—Ireland in the 1830s, a delicate time historically, if such a word can be used for the Irish—that sat roughly a decade out from the vaunted potato famine, which would kill more than a million people and uprooted many more by some estimates. In order to create a seeming conformity in the Isles, these British soldiers helped establish the first National Schools, which encouraged literacy but provided classes only in English, and thus prohibited the speaking of Irish/Gaelic, which greatly contributed to its decline. This battle focuses on three characters— Hugh, a highly regarded teacher who speaks fluent Greek and Latin; his son Owen, who becomes a kind of interpreter for the soldiers, while caught between them and his love for his native land; and Yolland, a soldier who also maps the countryside and eventually falls for a young lass, rendering him, well, a bit lost in translation himself.

Hugh (the marvelous, rock-solid Kevin Gudahl) teaches adults in this hedge-school, which was illegal and furtive in its existence because of the Anglican stance on who should know what. One easily imagines a kind of drunken philosopher here, as Hugh imparts what wisdom and history he can in eloquent phrases and between lifts of his flask. He believes that the world is affected not by the facts of history, but by how we view those facts—an outlook not totally lost on our world today. But he’s practical as well; he sees with disdain what’s ahead in the coming loss of his own tongue.

His son Owen (Casey Hoekstra as an appealing spirit of not-so-torn allegiance) is a knowledgeable, almost gifted translator between English and Irish, taking to his task with a fervor that rivals the soldiers themselves in its passion. Owen drives the play forward with that fervency and commitment. His brother Manus (Andrew Mueller, persuasively gentler in outlook and demeanor than Owen) attempts to hold down the linguistic fort in wanting to preserve all native language and education, all while remaining in his father’s shadow. Mr. Mueller’s departure from Ballybeg at the top of Act II is absolutely riveting.

There really is all manner of great character work here, a Writers Theatre stamp. Jimmy Jack (a fabulous turn by Jonathan Weir) is a wizened old soul of letters who regularly waxes poetic about his admiration for the gods and goddesses of mythology, often in Greek or Latin. The lovers Lieutenant Yolland (a deeply affected young soldier given wonderful and painful shrift by Eric Hellman) and the comely girl Maire (Tyler Meredith is lovely and quite effective) have the ultimate hill to climb; they cannot communicate on a practical level, because they literally speak different languages. Yet a love emerges. And this plays out achingly, thanks to a chilling moment that Ms. Meredith handles with aplomb.

The almost elfin mute Sarah (Julia Rowley, convincing in an extremely difficult role) finds it hard to even articulate her own name. Gregory Linington valiantly takes on his Captain Lancey, who could have been a thankless taskmaster were it not for the actor’s inherent skill. Doalty (Ian Maryfield) and Bridget (Chloe Baldwin) are both young adult students at Hugh’s school.  They have a constantly energetic and fun exchange whenever they appear. And all this is contained on a set that seems a combination classroom/apartment/lean-to ingeniously offered by Andrew Boyce. The always right Andre Pleuss gives the audience a sound scheme of economy and thought. The dialect work of the cast was stellar; dialect coach Eva Breneman earns kudos here, too. And always Mr. Friel, watching like a voice in one’s ear, making sure that the attempt to change the world through its languages gets a full and proper examination. So graceful, and so telling, in the results.

RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.com  Coming soon, his new solo play “Echo Holler.” www.echoholler.com

PHOTO | Michael Brosilow

Writers Theater
presents
Translations
325 Tudor Court
Glencoe, IL
through May 4

WEBSITE

PROGRAM

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

ARCHIVE

PicksInSix® is a registered trademark of Roxbury Road Creative, LLC

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