It is painful to see brilliant text landing
flat due to bad direction. When the lead actress reduces the energy of the
talented cast, it is difficult to hold a yawn and a tear. Unfortunately, that
is the case with Antigone by Jean Anouilh, produced by the
Fusion Theatre and playing currently at the Theatre Row. The artistic director
of the company, Eilin O'Dea, is both the
director of the show and plays the title character.
Photo by Jonathan Slaff
O'Dea makes for a
much older Antigone than we are used to seeing; the fact that even a short
modern dress, which the actress constantly pulls down, cannot change. I would
ignore all of that, even with her Irish accent, but the rest of the cast is
rather conventional, and O'Dea, maybe a wonderful actress otherwise, simply
doesn’t fit in.
After all, it is the
convincing performance that makes the audience look beyond what they might find
troubling in an actor’s physicality. But if the performance is not particularly
impressive, we start grasping for the clues in her appearance to justify our dislikes.
I stand for more diversity in the theatre, but the interpretation of the
character has to come from the embracing of who you are, not from pretending to
be somebody else.
Antigone from Sophocles’
ancient Greek drama is also a misfit in a sense. The adaptation by Jean Anouilh,
written and first performed in 1944 in Nazi occupied Paris, emphasizes the
rejection of authority and rebellious spirit of the young heroine. Fusion Theatre’s production uses
ultra-minimalistic scenic design (by Dahlia Barakat )
and mostly modern day clothing, putting us in some “theatrical” limbo, which
seems more like the product of a lazy mind than an artistic decision, and it is
ultimately a lost opportunity to make a statement.
After Antigone’s
brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices, killed each other in a civil war, her uncle Creon
(Paul Goodwin-Groen) becomes the new ruler of Thebes. He orders to bury Eteocles with honors and to leave Polyneices’
corpse to rot under the sun, and to kill anybody who will attempt a proper burial.
Antigone refuses to follow the royal decree and risks her life to perform all
necessary rituals, despite her marriage with Creon’s son Heamon (Dave Grant) at
stake, and the begging of her older sister, Ismene (Allison Threadgold).
The opposition of
Creon, blindly believing that everything should be done to protect the order,
and Antigone, faithful to her loved ones, is the main conflict of the play. The
dialogue of the two towards the end of the second act, where Creon explains the
political motivation behind his cruel decisions, comes as a bitter revelation
and makes you hate and pity and love Creon with all your heart.
Goodwin-Groen,
portraying the king, builds up to this moment gradually throughout the entire
play. And even despite the stale, virtually non-existing staging (the actors
spend most of the scenes glued to one place), Goodwin-Groen astonishingly conveys
the drama of a “sovereign out of necessity”. His monumental posture of broad
shoulders and eyes full of sadness make him appear like true royalty, whether
he is reasoning with his niece in a soft voice or sings “Ella Giammai” from Don Carlo in thundering bass.
Antigone is infused with arias from Verdi’s
and Purcell's operas, adding
even more pathos to the Greek tragedy. The four principle characters performing
them, Antigone (Eilin O'Dea), the First
Guard (Byron Singleton), Creon
(Paul Goodwin-Groen) and the Messenger (Paulina Yeung),
all possess strong beautiful voices, amplified by the tight box of the Studio
Theatre. Even though the arias might seem a bit too long and heavy in the
relation to the spoken text and are there are no supertitles, these numbers are
the gems of the production.
__________
Antigone runs at Theatre Row - The Studio Theatre, 410 West
42nd Street, through May 28th. The running time is 2 hours with one
intermission. Performances are Tuesday through Saturday at 8:00pm; Saturday and
Sunday at 3:00pm. Tickets are $37.50 for general admission, $25 for students
and seniors and are available at www.telecharge.com or by calling (212)
239-6200.
Antigone is written by Jean Anouilh is based on the Sophocles’ tragedy of the same name. It is directed by Eilin O'Dea and
produced by Fusion Theatre. Set
design is by Dahlia Barakat.
The cast is Eilin O’Dea, Paul Goodwin-Groen, Dave
Grant, Sue-Ellen
Mandell, Igby
Rigney, Byron Singleton, Allison Threadgold, Paulina Yeung.
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