Friday, June 27, 2014
LINCOLN CENTER
Avery Fisher Hall
New York Philharmonic
Beethoven - Triple Concerto for Piano, Violin, and Cello
Beethoven - Piano Concerto No, 5, Emperor
Alan Gilbert - Conductor
Yefim Bronfman - Piano
Glenn Dicterow - Violin
Carter Brey - Cello
"The festival momentously concludes: Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow performs his final Philharmonic concerts, joining Bronfman and Principal Cello Carter Brey for Beethoven’s joyful Triple Concerto. And Bronfman closes his residency with Beethoven’s majestic Emperor Concerto, perhaps his most popular."
Please, watch video below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOMbwsAaJDM#t=15
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
MUSEUM
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Goya and the Altamira Family
Charles James: Beyond Fashion
Goya and the Altamira Family
April 22–August 3, 2014
This exhibition features Goya's four portraits of members of the Altamira family, including the so-called Boy in Red, one of the Metropolitan Museum's most beloved Old Master paintings. Also on view is a fifth Altamira portrait, by Agustín Esteve. This is the first time these family portraits—now dispersed in public and private collections in Spain and the United States—have been seen together as a group.
Charles James: Beyond Fashion
The inaugural exhibition of the newly renovated Costume Institute examines the career of legendary twentieth-century Anglo-American couturier Charles James (1906–1978), and is presented in two locations—special exhibition gallerieson the Museum's first floor and The Costume Institute's Anna Wintour Costume Center on the ground floor. It explores James's design process, specifically his use of sculptural, scientific, and mathematical approaches to construct revolutionary ball gowns and innovative tailoring that continue to influence designers today. The retrospective features approximately sixty-five of the most notable designs James produced over the course of his career, from the 1920s until his death in 1978.
The first-floor special exhibition galleries spotlight and analyze the resplendent glamour and breathtaking architecture of James's ball gowns. On view are fifteen dramatically lit, iconic James gowns including the "Clover Leaf," "Butterfly," "Tree," and "Swan" from the late 1940s and early 1950s. Analytical animations, text, x-rays, and vintage images tell the story of each gown's intricate construction and history.
The Anna Wintour Costume Center's Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery provides the technology and flexibility to dramatize James's craft. A pathway winds around a cruciform platform where the evolution and metamorphosis of James's day and evening wear are explored in four categories: Spirals & Wraps, Drapes & Folds, Platonic Form, and Anatomical Cut. Video animations focused on the most representative examples of his approach are shown on monitors, and live-feed cameras detailing the backs of garments are projected on the walls. The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery displays ephemera from James's life and work, including drawings, pattern pieces, dress forms, jewelry maquettes, scrapbooks, and accessories.
"Outstanding . . . a tour de force of masterworks."—New York Times
"The show itself is pretty extraordinary."—David Byrne
"The curators...have created an intelligent and playful account of the way [James] fused glamour and architecture in cloth."—The Economist
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Saturday, June 21, 2014
THEATER
Theater for a New Audience
The Killer
We're headed for Brooklyn! This play is at the Polonsky Shakespeare Center where we saw King Lear and Midsummer Night's Dream.
“A stunner… sprawling yet intimate, scary yet hilarious treasure from the futurist past…Michael Shannon, full of power and grief, dazzles.” - Linda Winer, Newsday
“The season’s must-see, must-fail-to-understand theatrical event. Ionesco would not have minded the shrugging: bewilderment is both his style and his point.” - Jesse Green, New York Magazine
“FOUR STARS. Extraordinary …a dream cast…bravura staging…witty, musical translation…this macabre masterpiece blazes to life.” - David Cote, Time Out New York
“A definitive production.” – Pete Hempstead, TheaterMania
“A gripping theatrical experience.” - Frank Scheck, The Hollywood Reporter
“Rich in atmosphere.” - Joe Dziemianowicz, New York Daily News
THE KILLER
By Eugène Ionesco
Newly Translated: Michael Feingold
Featuring Kristine Nielsen, Michael Shannon, Paul Sparks, and Robert Stanton in a company of 20 actors.
Directed by Darko Tresnjak
By Eugène Ionesco
Newly Translated: Michael Feingold
Featuring Kristine Nielsen, Michael Shannon, Paul Sparks, and Robert Stanton in a company of 20 actors.
Directed by Darko Tresnjak
May 17-June 29, 2014
Ionesco’s The Killer was first performed in 1959 in Paris. Berenger (Michael Shannon), a cheerful, well-meaning everyman, discovers a “radiant city” near his dismal urban home, a perpetually sunny, impeccably clean place full of marvelous architecture and beautiful gardens. The one hitch: a serial murderer has been brazenly killing people there for so long that the authorities have given up trying to catch him.
Theater Review: Ionesco’s The Killer Is Confusing and Unskippable
- By Jesse Green
Unable to get much attention amid pre-Tony hysteria and post-Tony exhaustion, some Off Broadway companies seem to take advantage of the blackout to dump inventory. Be warned: June is therefore littered, like May before it, with pointless, wayward, or cadaverous plays. How gratifying, then, to find the Theater for a New Audience doubling down on its serious mission with some unreconstructed midcentury Ionesco. And though The Killer remains perplexing and even a bit annoying after 55 years, it’s surely the season’s must-see, must-fail-to-understand theatrical event.
Ionesco, you feel, would not have minded the shrugging: Bewilderment is both his style and his point. He dramatizes it here in the character of Berenger, a weather-beaten everyman who also appears in later Ionesco works like Rhinoceros and Exit the King. In The Killer, we meet him as he tours a new Paris neighborhood of perfect homes and permablue skies: a place, the architect tells him, where the roofs are waterproofed not because it rains but “as a matter of principle.” With its quasi-totalitarian bureaucracy and atmosphere of vague dread, this civic paradise could be taken for a dystopic Big Brotherland; not for nothing does Darko Tresnjak’s stunning production begin with a rotating atomic-alert signal projected on the floor and ominous belches of vapor emanating from grates. Even so, Ionesco wants us to see the architect’s creation the way Berenger does, as a “radiant city”: an actual wonder, not an ironic one.
The problem with this scary utopia — and perhaps we’re meant to feel that all utopias are inherently scary — is external: A serial killer is on the loose. Each day he murders as many as three locals, using the same ridiculous technique: He interests them in a picture of a colonel, then, as they look at it, pushes them into a lagoon. Berenger, in Michael Shannon’s beautifully questing, coulda-been-a-contender performance, is horrified by this violation of the values of civilized society and also by the general lack of concern about it. He cannot understand why the police have given up trying to stop the murders. Or why people don’t seem very afraid. The architect, who is not in danger because the killer does not attack civil servants, only minds that the mayhem has made selling the remaining homes in the neighborhood more difficult.
If you try to force the play’s dramatic situations to align directly or even metaphorically with reality, you are bound to fail: That’s the nature of the absurd style. You have to accept that its logic is a closed loop. The loops are longer here than in earlier Ionesco works like The Bald Soprano, whose rules seem to expire line by nutty line. Here the rules apply until Ionesco hits reset at each intermission. Act One is basically an orderly if surreal dialogue between Berenger and the architect: a Magritte painting come to life. (Robert Stanton as the architect is marvelously blasé.) But Act Two, in which Berenger confronts a sickly friend who seems to have evidence about the crime in his briefcase, is a Kafka fever dream. (Paul Sparks is hilariously creepy in the role.) And most of Act Three is vaudeville, with alternating bits and shticks that satirize politics, the police, and anything else within earshot. Let’s just say that bug-eyed Kristine Nielsen shows up as a demagogue called the Goose Woman, promising soup for all if elected and looking like Kim Jong-il.
I’m not sure we really benefit from so much labored distraction, but eventually it leads to a stunning final scene and the heart of the drama. In a confrontation between ineffectual good and incomprehensible evil, Berenger tries to wheedle the killer into an acceptance of his guilt, or at least into an explanation of his motives. But there are, it seems, no motives. (The play premiered in Paris in 1959 as Tueur sans gages: roughly, Killer Without Contract.) As Berenger runs out of arguments and basically ceases to function, we realize that his line of inquiry — whether evil is just an unavoidable part of nature or an expression of addressable problems in society — is moot. Absurd, in fact. For two-and-a-half acts Ionesco has made you struggle to understand his world only so he can show you at the end that, as in the real world, you can’t.
It’s an Olympian bait-and-switch, possibly meant to be chuckled over later, with an anesthetic gulp of Pernod. But this production doesn’t allow us the distance necessary for such a reaction. In that sense, Shannon’s tireless commitment to grounding the surreality of the script in a realistically emotional performance is at odds with the other, more comic turns and with the suave gorgeousness of Tresnjak’s staging. The translation by the critic Michael Feingold, late of The Village Voice, is also remarkably smooth, finding perfectly modern ways to sound ever so slightly peculiar. (“Good people, you’ve been deluded,” exclaims the Goose Woman. “We’re going to de-delude you!”) And though you really couldn’t ask for a better rendition of this rarely seen work, it has to be said that the hopelessness of humanity is not a pleasurable, summery theme. Rather, hopelessness being a kind of narcissism, it is only fun until it’s dull. What Berenger admits about his fellow man thus holds true for this worthy three-hour play as well: “I love human beings, but from a distance.”
The Killer is at The Polonsky Shakespeare Center through June 29.
Friday, June 20, 2014
LINCOLN CENTER
Avery Fisher Hall
New York Philharmonic
Alan Gilbert - Conductor
Yefim Bronfman - Piano
Beethoven - Piano Concerto No. 2
Sean Shepherd - Songs (World Premiere–New York Philharmonic Commission)
Beethoven - Piano Concerto No. 3
Beethoven writes his Second Concerto as a showpiece for his virtuosity on the keyboard, but by the time he writes his Third Concerto his true genius is becoming apparent. Also: Songs by Sean Shepherd, praised for his “kaleidoscopic use of orchestral color” (The New York Times).
Tonight was another wonderful evenbing. The Philharmonic has a wonderful sound.
Interesting, revealing video below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IOMbwsAaJDMTonight was another wonderful evenbing. The Philharmonic has a wonderful sound.
Interesting, revealing video below.
Look what I found on the back of the seat directly in front of me.
Small world!
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
THEATER
Walter Kerr Theater
A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder
"A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder is a musical comedy, with the book and lyrics by Robert L. Freedman and the music and lyrics by Steven Lutvak. It is based on the 1907 novel Israel Rank: the Autobiography of a Criminal by Roy Horniman.[1] The play opened on Broadway at the Walter Kerr Theatre in 2013. The Broadway production ultimately won four Tony Awards, including Best Musical at the 68th Tony Awards.
In 1909 London, commoner Monty Navarro finds out he is a member of the aristocratic D'Ysquith family, and ninth in line to inherit an earldom. He decides to eliminate the other eight heirs who stand in his way."
As we left the theater two things were happening; The Tony Award won last week for Best Musical was being delivered to "A Gentleman's guide to Love and Mariage" and James Franco was signing autographs for the people who attended "Of Mice and Men." Lots of excitement.
THEATER REVIEW
Bumping Off Kin, a Song in Your Heart
Serial killers may be all the rage on bookshelves and television screens — so ubiquitous, you’d think they made up a major demographic of the world population — but they are comparatively rare in the peppier precincts of musical theater. Now, after a long dry spell, Broadway has a deadly sociopath to call its own. Please give a hearty welcome to Monty Navarro, the conniving killer who helps turn murder most foul into entertainment most merry in the new musical “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder.”
Despite the high body count, this delightful show will lift the hearts of all those who’ve been pining for what sometimes seems a lost art form: musicals that match streams of memorable melody with fizzily witty turns of phrase. Bloodlust hasn’t sung so sweetly, or provided so much theatrical fun, since Sweeney Todd first wielded his razor with gusto many a long year ago.
The seriously squeamish needn’t fear entering the Walter Kerr Theater, where this frolicsome operetta opened on Sunday night. Although our antihero, played with brash innocence lightly sprinkled with arsenic by Bryce Pinkham, eventually piles up a stack of corpses to rival that of dear old Mr. Todd, he’s a much cuddlier fellow. A gentleman indeed, whose only wish is to secure his fortune by bumping off a few inconvenient relatives in Edwardian England.
Since these spoiled sprigs on the family tree are mostly stuffed shirts or stuffed skirts — and are all played by the dazzling Jefferson Mays — you’ll be laughing too hard to shed a tear for any of them. (Those looking for fresh holiday entertainment for the family should know there’s nothing here to frighten children.)
Mr. Mays won a Tony Award for playing multiple roles in the Pulitzer Prize-winning solo show “I Am My Own Wife,” but the chameleonic performance he gives here makes even that feat seem simple — a matter of filing your nails while whistling “Edelweiss,” say. In a true tour de force that is hardly likely to be bettered on Broadway this season (apologies to the magnificent Mark Rylance, and those two knights, Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart, performing Beckett and Pinter in repertory), Mr. Mays sings, dances, ice-skates, bicycles and generally romps through some eight roles — flipping among personas male, female and somewhere in between — at a pace that sets your head spinning. (It’s almost an in-joke when one of his doomed characters meets his end through decapitation.)
Written by Robert L. Freedman (book and lyrics) and Steven Lutvak (music and lyrics), both welcome newcomers to Broadway, “Gentleman’s Guide” is based on a 1907 novel by Roy Horniman. Fans of British film will recognize the plot from the classic British comedy “Kind Hearts and Coronets,” which gave Alec Guinness a chance to display his own virtuosity as a raft of British gentlefolk falling prey to an ambitious relative. Here the mood is more farcical, the score a skillful homage to Gilbert and Sullivan, and the well-heeled family is called the D’Ysquiths. (That’s DIE-squith, wouldn’t you know.)
The penniless Monty little knows of his relationship to the clan when we find him, in the opening scene, mourning his newly deceased mother. A visit from an old friend of hers, the nosy Miss Shingle (the excellent Jane Carr), brings startling news: The mother he knew only as a Dickensian sufferer — scrubbing floors to feed her beloved only son — was in fact a highborn D’Ysquith, banished forever when she ran off with a Castilian, defying her family’s wishes.
“And by my estimation,” Miss Shingle casually adds, “only eight other relations stand between you and the current Earl of Highhurst, Lord Adalbert D’Ysquith himself.”
This tempting tidbit lodges in Monty’s fertile mind and begins forthwith to sow dark intentions. Monty is on the verge of losing his love, the socially ambitious Sibella Hallward (Lisa O’Hare), to a more well-heeled man. Might she not reconsider if Monty were to establish himself as a bona fide D’Ysquith, or better yet, to hack his way through all that underbrush on the family tree and arrive at the tippy top, becoming the ninth earl of Highhurst?
Fortune favors the brave, and soon Monty — through happenstance and the occasional bit of malicious handiwork — is rocketing up the social scale, as his relatives fall victim to unhappy, ahem, accidents. Under the nicely pitched direction of Darko Tresnjak — a Shakespeare specialist here making his own impressive Broadway debut — Monty’s journey unfolds as a series of brisk comic vignettes, set to songs that honorably re-create the boisterous heyday of the English music hall and the prime of 19th-century operetta. (The charming set, by Alexander Dodge, features a gorgeously detailed Victorian-style stage within a stage, and the spot-on period costumes are by Linda Cho.)
I could fill the rest of my review with quotations from the lyrics that particularly tickled. Here’s just a morsel, from one of the show’s highlights, a comic ditty lampooning the rapacities of would-be do-gooders, in which Lady Hyacinth D’Ysquith (Mr. Mays, natch), desperate to find a new cause to champion, lights on the opportunities in darkest Africa:
We’ll civilize a village in the jungle!
It can’t take long to learn their mother tongue!
Of words they have but six,
And five of them are clicks,
And all of them are different words for dung!
Mr. Lutvak and Mr. Freedman may be reworking forms that have been previously established, primarily the patter song and the romantic ballad. But their score still establishes itself as one of the most accomplished (and probably the most literate) to be heard on Broadway in the past dozen years or so, since the less rigorous requirements of pop songwriting have taken over.
It is beautifully sung by the rich-voiced cast, with Mr. Pinkham handling his heavy chores with a light touch, his firm tenor matched by pleasingly (and necessarily) precise diction. Ms. O’Hare plays Sibella with pertness and poise, and has a bright, clear soprano. So, too, does the wonderful Lauren Worsham, who plays Phoebe D’Ysquith, the rival for Monty’s heart, with a demure sweetness that never cloys. (Fortunately for Phoebe, she is not in the direct line of heirs to the D’Ysquith fortune.)
Mr. Mays is not a musical theater specialist, to be sure, which makes his accomplishment here all the more impressive. Most of his songs don’t make any great demands on the tonsils (he’s largely doing patter material), but he manages to sing in a variety of voices, distinguishing each character with a distinctive sound.
A distinctive look and personality, too: the dazed, toothy dottiness of the Rev. Lord D’Ezekial; the buxom heartiness of Lady Hyacinth; the pompous grumpiness of the reigning Lord Adalbert; the tallyho perkiness of the bright-eyed beekeeper Henry (spinning forth hilarious yet never vulgar double-entendres in a mock-homoerotic duet with Monty, “Better With a Man”).
As each precise caricature of British snootiness or silliness comes bounding onto the stage, Mr. Mays seems to be challenging himself to elicit bigger laughs, and he almost always succeeds. All but one of his characters ends up six feet under by the time this daffy, inspired musical concludes, but his brilliant performance deserves to be immortalized in Broadway lore for some time to come.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
LINCOLN CENTER
Metropolitan Opera House
American Ballet Theater - Giselle
"The epitome of Romantic ballet, this heart-rending tale of unrequited love, remorse and forgiveness perfectly fuses music, movement and drama. The role of Giselle requires an exquisite stylist with daring dramatic and technical skills to create a compelling portrait of the innocent, yet ultimately noble, village maiden. In this universally acclaimed production, ABT's unrivalled roster of international ballet stars brings Giselle's mystery and ethereal beauty vividly to life."
David Hallberg became the first American to become a principal dancer with the Bolshoi in 2011.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hallberg
The principal ballerina was Polina Semionova.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polina_Semionova
It was a night at the highest level of ballet.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
RECITAL
Carnegie Hall
Denis Matsuev - Piano
"Hailed “as
the successor to Russian keyboard lions like Evgeny Kissin, Arcadi Volodos, and
… Vladimir Horowitz” (The New York Times), Denis Matsuev has been
establishing himself as one of the most sought-after pianists of his
generation. Ever since his triumphant victory at the 1998 International Tchaikovsky
Competition in Moscow, he has been winning acclaim from critics and audiences
alike for his combination of stunning virtuosity and clear artistic identity.
The dynamic pianist returns to Carnegie Hall for a recital of works by Haydn,
Schumann, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninoff."
HAYDN Piano
Sonata in E-flat Major, Hob. XVI: 52
SCHUMANN Carnaval,
Op. 9
RACHMANINOFF
Prelude in G Minor, Op. 23, No. 5
RACHMANINOFF
Prelude in G-sharp Minor, Op. 32, No. 12
TCHAIKOVSKY Dumka
in C Minor, Op. 59
TCHAIKOVSKY Méditation,
Op. 72, No. 5
RACHMANINOFF Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat Minor
RACHMANINOFF Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat Minor
Saturday, June 14, 2014
MUSEUM & BALLET
Morgan Library
Marks of Genius - Bodleian Library
"Marks of Genius presents some of the greatest achievements of human creativity, from the beginning of recorded information up to the industrial era, as preserved in the incomparable collections of Oxford University's Bodleian Library. The exhibition features approximately sixty rare and exceptional objects from diverse disciplines that serve as points of departure for exploring some of the fundamental meanings of genius.
The ways in which genius has been cultivated, recognized, and venerated will be explored through such works as early manuscripts of Euclid's Elementa and Gregory I's Regular Pastoralis, the oldest book written in English; an Arabic manuscript book of constellations; a unique papyri of Sappho's poems; the copyright deposit copy of Shakespeare's First Folio; a thirteenth-century manuscript of the Magna Carta; the definitive account of Aztec civilization; the manuscript of Handel's Messiah; J.R.R. Tolkien's drawings for The Hobbit; and Mary Shelley's manuscript draft of Frankenstein.
Marks of Genius travels exclusively to the Morgan before returning to the Bodleian Library to mark the opening of a new building devoted to its special collections."
http://genius.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/
Under construction.
Friday, June 13, 2014
MUSEUM & THEATER
9/11 Memorial Museum
http://www.911memorial.org
Brooks Atkinson Theater
After Midnight - Patti LaBelle
http://aftermidnightbroadway.com/?gclid=CjgKEAjwwuqcBRCSuoivmIPnkwQSJACpqj3kyHqKxJwUVbBoe9R4k2ndwmzgC2WTuPcvjrayq0xOHvD_BwE
"The Cotton Club is going to be the hottest of hot spots this summer! Patti LaBelle, Gladys Knight and Natalie Cole will join the roster of "Special Guest Star" vocalists in After Midnight . LaBelle is set to play performances from June 10 through 29, Knight from July 8 through August 3, and Cole August 5 through 31. The tuner, which recently garnered seven Tony nods, including Best Musical, is playing at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre.
Combined, the trio of legends have received 22 platinum and gold records, 18 Grammy Awards and sold almost 300 million albums worldwide. LaBelle has previously starred on Broadway in Fela! andPatti La Belle on Broadway. Knight appeared on the Great White Way in Smokey Joe’s Café. After Midnight marks Cole's Broadway debut.
Conceived by Jack Viertel, After Midnight is an evocative new musical that tackles the sexy, smoky glamour of the Jazz Age, set in the heyday of Duke Ellington’s years at Harlem’s Cotton Club. The show currently stars Vanessa Williams, Dulé Hill and Adriane Lenox."
Thursday, June 12, 2014
THEATER & MUSEUM
Park Avenue Armory
Macbeth - Shakespeare
We had a treat today at MOMA. We arrived before general opening time and members were allowed to go into the collection. We went immediately to the 5th floor where the greatest concentration of "museum" pieces are and had it literally all to ourselves. There was NO ONE there except the guards and us. It was a private museum for about an hour.
"Shakespeare’s classic tale of ambition and treachery gets a thrilling new life in the U.S. premiere of the electrifying production by Rob Ashford and Kenneth Branagh, following its acclaimed sold-out run at the Manchester International Festival in England. Kenneth Branagh, in his first Shakespeare performance in more than a decade, is joined by Alex Kingston, in their highly-anticipated New York stage debuts, as the once great leader and his adored wife, who incites him to sell his soul in the quest for greater power.
Utilizing the Armory’s unique space and military history, this audacious staging brings to life one of Shakespeare’s most powerful tragedies in an intensely physical, fast-paced production that places the audience directly on the sidelines of battle. Blood, sweat, and the elements of nature can be directly felt as the action unfurls across a traverse stage, with heaven beckoning at one end and hell looming at the other."
Macbeth at the Park Armory was a two hour descent triggered by greed into complete destruction with no relief. The setting was such that the actors, the play, and the battle were close enough to throw mud into our laps. It was Shakespeare in a Disney World setting. My concern was, "Would we be able to hear the words?" We heard every word in a room big enough to hold an indoor track meet.
Celebrity sightings: Rudy Giuliani, Ben Stiller, and Glenn Close.
Macbeth at the Park Armory was a two hour descent triggered by greed into complete destruction with no relief. The setting was such that the actors, the play, and the battle were close enough to throw mud into our laps. It was Shakespeare in a Disney World setting. My concern was, "Would we be able to hear the words?" We heard every word in a room big enough to hold an indoor track meet.
Celebrity sightings: Rudy Giuliani, Ben Stiller, and Glenn Close.
THEATER | THEATER
REVIEW
Rushing Headlong Into the Hurly-Burly
A Fast and Furious ‘Macbeth’ at Park Avenue Armory
By BEN BRANTLEYJUNE 5, 2014
Macbeth Kenneth Branagh, center, in the title role
in a production by him and Rob Ashford that opened on Thursday at the Park
Avenue Armory.
Sara
Krulwich/The New York Times
Hearts beat
fast in the thrilling new “Macbeth” that has transformed the Park Avenue Armory into a war zone, and
every breath starts to feel like a gasp. Rob Ashford and Kenneth Branagh’s
galloping British-born production, which opened on Thursday night with Mr.
Branagh in the title role, saturates everyone in it in adrenaline. Make that
everyone watching it, as well.
This is the
summer blockbuster that we wait for every year and too seldom find at the
multiplexes, one of those action-packed, spectacle-drenched shows that sweep
you right into their fraught, churning worlds and refuse to release you until
the lights come up — and maybe not even then. Of course, the dialogue here is a
bit richer than that of films inspired by comic books. But it’s also a whole
lot tastier, and there’s not a line spoken that doesn’t seem to have grown
organically from the wicked hurly-burly on the stage.
Once you do
catch your breath and can think calmly about what you’ve seen, you’ll realize
with how much care and intelligence this production has been assembled. But
it’s your viscera that dictate your responses while you’re watching, and you
have no alternative but to ride the speeding, jolting juggernaut that is this “Macbeth”
until it finally lets you off after two intermissionless hours.
A similar
lack of choice plagues Macbeth, the ambitious but ambivalent Scottish thane,
and his lusty wife, Lady Macbeth (Alex Kingston). Once they’ve started on their
path to power and the grave by murdering their king to claim his crown, there’s
no way that things could happen other than they do.
But this
production, like no other I’ve seen, translates that sense of inevitability
into sensory terms, and we start to feel the anxious resignation of being swept
up in a crowd that keeps moving forward en masse. The deluxe design team for
“Macbeth” — which includes Christopher Oram (set and costumes) and Neil Austin
(lighting) — has conjured a world that feels as lonely and immense as a blasted
heath and as confining as a mausoleum.
The actual
playing area is modeled after the 19th-century deconsecrated church in
Manchester, England, where I first saw this “Macbeth” (as part of
the Manchester
International Festival) last summer. Once again, there is a central
aisle between tiers of benches that turn the audience into a cross between
guilty churchgoers and prurient spectators at a bullfight. And once again,
there is a chancel at one end, with an altar ablaze with devotional candles.
But Mr. Oram
has scaled up his original designs and, free of the constraints of working in
an existing church, has shifted the emphasis from the ecclesiastic to the
chthonic. Theatergoers herded into the Armory’s main hall (and herded they are,
having been divided into seating groups with names of Scottish clans) walk a
stone path toward an ominous, Stonehenge-like structure.
This is a
place, you feel with the same instinct that overcomes you at the real
Stonehenge or the Roman Coliseum, where blood has been spilled for purposes
sacred and profane. These stones antedate even the long-ago, medieval world in
which this “Macbeth” is set. And it feels right that our first glimpse of those
creepy, prophetic witches (the lithely nubile Charlie Cameron, Laura Elsworthy
and Anjana Vasan) should be through the columns of this structure.
“These creatures must have come from a bubble
in the earth,” says Banquo (an unexpectedly and affectingly paternal Jimmy
Yuill), Macbeth’s comrade in arms and rival for the laurels of posterity. And
for all its churchly imagery, this is a very earthy “Macbeth.”
The
production begins in medias res: a full-throttle battle fought in the aisle
between the seating areas. The floor is dark dirt, soon to be moistened by rain
and blood. And throughout the show, people will grab handfuls of it, flinging
it in wide arcs, as if to further besmirch the always crepuscular skies.
We also sense
that the people who inhabit this ancient Scotland are not far from the primal
pull of a land that has been the subject of civil wars for as long as they can
remember. From the testy King Duncan (John Shrapnel) to the lowliest foot
soldier, their metabolisms are set by the rhythms of combat. And they are
accustomed to traveling with hyper-alertness and defensive speed among these
body-strewn fields where hidden adversaries may always lurk.
That is
certainly the life Macbeth has known. And Mr. Branagh (a memorable Henry
V and Hamlet on film), in his first Shakespearean stage outing in
more than a decade, cannily gives us a soldier who is at ease only when acting
like a soldier. Though he is not without ambition, or the raw urge to rule, he
needs to be commanded to tap it.
Enter the
witches, who tell him there’s a throne in his future. And here comes his
determined wife to make sure he turns prophecy into reality. Ms.
Kingston (best known here for “E.R.,” on TV) provides a portrait of
a lady of deep appetites and exposed nerves.
Her Lady
Macbeth has absorbed the prevailing martial instinct — to command, to protect,
to vanquish — into her undeniably sexual bond with her husband. The passions
blur together in this world, and nobody has the time to stand still and sort
them out.
Mr. Branagh
delivers the early monologues of vacillation, as Macbeth contemplates regicide,
with the briskness of a military mind that must clear itself of obstacles. And
because he is closeting up his doubts and fears, his subsequent eruptions into
madness, when words abruptly morph into howls, have a harrowing logic.
This actor
doesn’t milk the soliloquies as flashy set pieces; they always exist in the
context of the moment. And when he finally arrives at the “tomorrow and
tomorrow and tomorrow” speech, it’s in a drained and defeated voice. It’s the
one time in the play that Macbeth allows himself to see clearly, and because he
now has, we know he’s a goner.
Seeing
clearly, of course, isn’t easy in a world of endless night. And Mr. Austin’s
lighting summons shadows pregnant with menace — all the characters keep looking
over their shoulders to make sure they’re alone — and with dreams that take on
flesh. Mr. Ashford uses his experience as a celebrated director of musicals to
stunning, time-bending effect here, in sequences that include a funeral that
turns into a coronation and a mesmerizing procession of royal apparitions.
The cast,
which includes some welcome new additions, is even stronger than it was when I
saw “Macbeth” in Manchester. Everybody is marching to the same spectral drummer
here, and everybody keeps both anger and fear close to the surface.
The good guys
in “Macbeth” are generally bores and stiffs. But Richard Coyle is a
compellingly fierce Macduff (another natural-born soldier), and Alexander
Vlahos plays the boy-king-to-be Malcolm with a tremulous vulnerability that
makes you worry about Scotland’s future. I even enjoyed the drunken Porter (Tom
Godwin), often a tedious lout, who here emerges as a sour and sullied creature,
the jester that his time deserves.
As for those
witches, they keep popping up all over — occasionally levitating (hey, they’re
witches), but also scurrying about and giggling, like wicked little gargoyle
girls determined to make mischief among the oafish, self-destructive grown-ups.
And how they seem to enjoy the bloody fruits of their labors. These Weird
Sisters are having the time of their eternal lives. In that regard, you’ll find
it hard not to identify with them.
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