The
audience streams down the middle section of a nearly empty mezzanine on a Wednesday
matinee performance of “The Present” which is finishing its run on Broadway.
Everybody is excited to see Cate Blanchett playing Anna when the curtain goes
up, and then they struggle through a long exposition, where more than a dozen
guests are introduced as they arrive to Anna’s 40th Birthday party that
takes place in their family’s summer cottage.
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photo by Joan Marcus
Extravagant
in her behavior and widow of a general, Anna is bored out of her mind and eager
to explore the deepest vortex of human nature, as long as it entertains her. The
gates of her estate should have a warning sign “The party contains gun fire,
drunken dancing on the verge of an orgy, and every possible bad decision your
buzzed mind can make”. But it doesn’t and it is even better to receive these
“presents” as a surprise.
Cate
Blanchett plays Anna as playful and fearless. She does silly hops across the
stage in one scene and blasts at the ceiling out of the shotgun in another.
Dressed by the costume designer, Alice Bubidge, as though for a Vogue
editorial, Blanchett takes center stage and overshadows Richard Roxburgh,
playing her on again off again love interest, Mikhail Platonov.
The
unfinished play, known as “Platonov” (or “Fatherlessness”), is the first play
written by an 18 year old Anton Chekhov in 1897. It was first discovered and
published in 1923 and has since had a few rewrites. The current adaptation is made
by Andrew Upton (Cate Blanchett’s husband) and takes place in mid-90s Russia.
After separation of the USSR in 1991, Russians are struggling to find a new
class and cultural identity. Western rock music, 7up soda and Adidas jackets
surely liven up the party, but they can’t make the eternal sadness go away.
Upton
is very close to capturing this mythical Russian spirit, where women are so
brave and powerful that they can “stop a horse mid-gallop” and men are
constantly indulging in vodka and soul searching. Blanchett and Roxburgh make a
perfect couple that way. Unfortunately, the rest of the play falls short and
feels confused.
The
scenic design, by Alice Babidge, matches the state of confusion of the play by mostly
looking like the sets from different shows as though most of them came
unfinished from the shop. The minimalistic approach to three of four sets is
forgotten in the final act, where movie-rain is pouring outside of the
realistically furnished living room.
Long story short, the Broadway debut of Cate
Blanchett confirmed the brilliance of the actress’s talent. It is unfortunate
that the setting for this brilliance is rather shabby.
“The
Present”, directed by John Crowley and runs through March 19th in
the Ethel Barrymore Theatre at 243 West 47th street.
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