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April 26, 2007

Will in the Wild: As You Like It at OSF
by WILLIAM
S. KOWINSKI
As of this week, William
Shakespeare is 443 years old, and he's still making news. Without
looking for it, I saw his name on the cover of at least three
periodicals on the magazine rack at Northtown Books. This birthday
sees a new edition of his Complete Works, and several new books,
including one I already admire, Shakespeare the Thinker
by the late A.D. Nuttall. Shakespeare Inside describes
the impact of his plays performed in prisons.
There's been a steady stream of new film interpretations,
and the burgeoning Shakespeare industry inspired a wonderful
TV series from Canada, "Sling and Arrows." Shakespeare
still fascinates audiences, and despite the perils of producing
his plays, directors and actors continue to take on the challenge
because there is so much to learn and experience.
Of our established community and college theatres
here, only North Coast Repertory Company regularly produces Shakespeare,
a commitment not only admirable in itself, but valuable to the
entire local theatre community. I was disappointed to see that
mine was the only review of their recent Henry IV Part 1.
Without broader and deeper dialog, we're missing a continuing
opportunity that these great plays and their rich theatrical
history provide.
We are most fortunate to be only hours from one
of the few theatres on the continent to regularly offer world-class
productions of Shakespeare. At the Oregon Shakespeare Festival
right now there's a production of one of the Bard's best: As
You Like It.
Moving Shakespeare's plays to different places
and historical periods has become a fashion, with mixed results.
It works when it illuminates the play, and it's even better if
both play and the era illuminate each other. The OSF production
(directed by J.R. Sullivan) is set in early 1930s America --
or, more precisely, in the version we know from Hollywood movies.
Those movie images quickly communicate important elements like
power relationships -- when Orlando (the younger son of a deceased
nobleman) is working on a loading dock, and his gangster-like
boss is his older brother, Oliver, we get it immediately.
This theatricality, together with the energy it
engenders on stage, emphasizes clarity, an OSF hallmark, further
encouraged by this production's participation in a National Endowment
of the Arts initiative called "Shakespeare for a New Generation."
The theatre was filled with responsive young people when we saw
it. They were even laughing at 400-year-old jokes.
You know the story: Orlando and Rosalind fall for
each other, both are exiled from the court to the Forest of Arden
by the Evil Duke, where they find the Good Duke and each other.
Disguised as a boy, Rosalind tutors the clueless Orlando on how
to win his lady. In the enchanted wild, order is eventually restored,
brothers are reconciled with brothers, and just about everybody
gets married.
When I saw this play at the Pittsburgh Public Theater,
I was impressed by the fierce energy of Monica Bell as Rosalind.
(Julie Oda, who played the country girl Audrey in that production,
plays Rosalind's companion Celia at OSF.) At OSF, Miriam Laube
had lots of energy, but her portrayal was edgier, more ambiguous.
She played to the audience maybe a bit too much, but what impressed
me most was that she often seemed to be doing what Rosalind was
doing: improvising, making it up as she goes along.
The 1930s "concept" didn't often impinge
on the integrity of the scenes or the acting and especially the
text. Though there was no obvious new interpretation, I heard
lines echo with each other in ways I hadn't heard before. Even
though the plot and much of the action can seem silly, this is
a deceptively profound play.
The character who gets no respect from play analysts
is Orlando. Because Rosalind drives much of the action, he is
dismissed as a somewhat dim hero. Yet the play begins with his
problem: not that his brother has robbed him of his monetary
inheritance, but of his birthright of nobility. "You have
trained me like a peasant, obscuring and hiding from me all gentlemanlike
qualities."
This is where the theme of the court (or the city)
versus nature (or the country) begins, and the resolution of
it in the Forest of Arden is Orlando's education. The court is
courtly, the country is rude -- until he learns that "gentleness"
or civility (a word that comes from the same root as "city")
is also natural. Many of Shakespeare's plays dramatize the evil
that humans do, almost always in the "artificial" world
of courts and nations. In Arden, it is brotherly love as well
as sexual love that is natural in the wild.
The natural is revealed through artifice -- song,
jest, thought, Rosalind's playacting and, above all, imagination.
Seeing through the eyes of others, imagining yourself in someone
else's shoes, is the beginning of empathy, and the beginning
of humanity. In this odd way, As You Like It is a kind
of key to all of Shakespeare's work, and perhaps to more than
that.
Check stagematters.blogspot.com for more.

Coming Up
Defying Gravity is this year's version
of Dell'Arte's popular end-of-the-year student clown show. It
plays this weekend Thursday through Saturday, April 26-28 at
8 p.m. in the Carlo Theatre. Info at dellarte.com.
HSU's popular end-of-the-year student 10 Minute
Play Festival also begins this weekend (April 26-28) at 7:30
p.m. and continues May 3-5. Info at 10HSU.blogspot.com.
The Rocky Horror Show finishes up
this weekend at Ferndale Rep (Barry Blake at the T-S called
it "the best entertainment around," and awarded it
Four Cookies. Okay, I made up that last part.) Its last shows
are Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. with a 2 p.m. matinee
on Sunday. Next up at the Rep is The Ghost of the Hart,
written and directed by Vikki Young and performed by the Rep's
Young Actors' Studio. It's about Bertha, the Rep's resident ghost.
It plays at the earlier time of 7:30 p.m. on May 3 through 5,
and May 10 through 12, with matinees on May 6 and 13 at 2 p.m.
(ferndalerep.org).
I remember reading somewhere that the one movie
scene guaranteed to evoke emotion from men is the game of catch
between father and son in Field of Dreams. I know it got
to me. On May 5, in the second game of a doubleheader at the
Arcata Playhouse, Jeff DeMark revives his baseball show, Hard
as Diamond, Soft as the Dirt, which weaves baseball stories
with memories of his father. The Delta Nationals, who play first
(at 7:30), return for the nightcap. The performance is being
filmed for a possible DVD. You can e-mail Jeff at jdemark44@humboldt1.com
for more information.

To extend the theatrical conversation and expand it beyond
the North Coast, I've started a Stage Matters blog, at
stagematters.blogspot.com.
You can also e-mail me at stagematters@sbcglobal.net.
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