Monday, June 30, 2008

Up with the Sun


...or at 730am, which is when I noticed its rays enough to distract me from my slumber. Brewing the bean and facing the day ahead with easy expectation. Writing continues (and will continue to continue), with definite forward progress palpable. After much has been researched and osmosed and after much has been written, and after much time off from writing - during whichtime of non-writing, much rumination on the writing has occurred - I am now simply Getting On With It, finishing scenes dangling in composition, and crafting new ones, trimming and cutting, and moving it forward, and "hooray" say I that I am. Most of the day will be writing, then off to see Coyote Love at Under St. Marks tonight.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS by Orson Welles: A Reconstruction For The Stage

The Magnificent Ambersons by Orson Welles: A Reconstruction for the Stage closed Thursday, June 12th to a lovely audience overfilling the Brick, with some at the apron of the stage sitting on mats from Babylon, Babylon!, and others sitting on the edges of risers; all were ready to listen and watch and laugh and take in the tale as Orson intended it to be told.
There is talk and interest among the creatives involved about a possible re-mount in 2009...

Thursday, June 5, 2008

HAMLET at the Delacorte.



Last evening I saw the new Hamlet at the Delacorte in the Park. Much of it was good. The cutting of the text was good. The duel at the end of Act Five was good. The actors were all good, some were excellent (Lauren Ambrose as Ophelia, David Harbour as Laertes, Sam Waterston as Polonius, and Jay O. Sanders as The Ghost, The Player King, and The Gravedigger most especially), but I felt that Director Oskar Eustis did not Illuminate the text - what I mean by that is nearly everything was well-spoken, but there was little in the language that was SPECIFICALLY Clear, and there was little in the action as directed that made clear WHY things were happening as they were: So much was done, seemingly, "because that's the way it's always been done". Hamlet treats Polonius badly from the first moments of the "fish-monger scene" but we don't know WHY, Hamlet treats Ophelia awfully in the "nunnery" scene, but we don't know WHY, the Play-within-a-play affects Claudius so powerfully, but we don't really know WHY. The "Advice to the players" was done as it usually is, with Hamlet telling the Players how to do their job, and the Players lovingly listening to him do it (I don't know ANY actors who would react that way - perhaps they were different in Shakespeare's day- but I doubt it, and the text of Hamlet indicates otherwise).

Andre Braugher is one of my favourite actors - I loved him in "Homicide:Life on the Street", so I was really looking forward to his Claudius, and I liked him very much in his scene-work (and particularly in Act IV), but felt that his soliloquies were a bit rushed- I didn't see a man wrestling with "Heaven and Earth" after the Play Scene. Michael Stuhlbarg is a very good actor, but I felt that much of what he was doing as Hamlet was VERY technical, and almost mannered. He seemed to be looking at himself in the role, and almost commenting on it. His best work was in the Gravedigger scene: very simple, very clear, very grounded, and very real.

I saw in the Program Notes that Oskar Eustis saw Hamlet as a man who is "clinically depressed", and that makes some sense of what I saw last night, I suppose, because to reduce the role and the story to such a 21st century diagnosis does both a simplistic disservice.