As the lights came up signaling intermission, the savvy
woman beside me who happened also to be my wife loudly proclaimed, “That’s a play!”
Her unfettered enthusiasm reflected not only the
considerable quality of Archduke,
whose First Act we had experienced and thoroughly enjoyed, it also reflected a contrast
with the theatrical production we had endured the night before, which, owing to
its deficiency in nuance and understanding (plus an surfeit of graphic “pregnancy
termination”) was, of course, not
“not a play”, just a less satisfactorily realized
one. Dr. M’s delighted response to Archduke provided a collective – if two
people qualifies as “collective” – measure of relief. I don’t know if we could have handled two
theatrical unpleasantnesses in a row.
Not wanting to beat a dead horse – although live horses rarely stick around to
suffer the consequences – as opposed to being an unknown quantity in a
pre-purchased theater package, Archduke
was a play I specifically wanted to see.
My research revealed that the play encouragingly met my “Trifecta of
Relevant Criteria” – the play’s subject matter – the assassination of Archduke
Leopold which led directly to World War I
(or as bandleader Lawrence Welk mistakenly called it, World War “I” – was of personal interest to me, our newspaper
theater critic had given it a positive review, and the reviewer also reported
that the play was funny.
(The remaining practical
criterion? Tickets were available,
which, if they hadn’t been, would
have made Archduke a production of
interest we were unable to attend. Which
happens all the time. “Let’s go.” “There’s no tickets.” “What’s on television?”)
One final word about Dry
Land, the Ruby Rae Spiegel “do-it-yourself-abortion-play” we had sat
uncomfortably through the evening before.
The playwright, circa twenty
when she wrote Dry Land, had a
knowing grasp of contemporary high schooler mannerisms and patois. But something
important at this point in her development as a playwright was, for me,
missing.
It is the difference, it later occurred to me, between a
photograph and an oil painting. What was
missing for me was “interpretation.” Cribbing my traditional standard, Ruby Rae
Spiegel had delivered the “What” of the play – the narrative storyline and appropriate
characters – but was severely lacking in stylistical “How.”
Archduke’s “What”,
triggering a world war more than qualifies as “That’s interesting”, earning a “Big Check” for “reverberating
import.” What made the savvy audience
member sitting beside me go, “That’s
a play!”, however, was its bold and
imaginative “How.”
Archduke’s
intention is to portray the inherent craziness of modern day terrorism, back
then and resonatingly today.
Acknowledging an absurdist character of the murderous enterprise, Archduke underscores the behavioral
lunacy with rambunctious comedy? The
result of this unlikely recipe, writes L.A.
Times Charles McNulty, is that “The comic energy carries the characters to
their tragic finish line.”
Manic physical comedy examples, ranging from slapstick “bomb
dropping” to herky-jerky physical movements? –
you had to be there to experience their jolting electrical “zizz.” But here’s a rib-tickling example of the
play’s manic verbal juxtapositions:
A young man, and destined assassin, is diagnosed with
terminal tuberculosis. As his
compassionate doctor struggles to get him to come to terms with his imminent
demise, the young patient, focusing on what he’s been told is a female skeleton
adorning the doctor’s examining room, becomes obsessed with the question,
“How did they get the bones out of her body?”
This dying youngster, and several others of his tubercular
ilk, are recruited to assassinate the Archduke, the impending “Duke-icide” sold,
by their revolutionary recruiter, not
via political persuasion, but on the enticement of adventure, historical immortality
and the reality of “Hey, I’m dying anyway; why not take out an Archduke before
I succumb?”
In the successful interweaving of the writing and accompanying
physical action, I detected an enhancing creative relationship between
playwright Rajiv Joseph and director Giovanna Sardelli (who have collaborated
before and are scheduled to collaborate again, so it’s not just me who thinks
they have an enhancing relationship, Joseph and Sardelli seem to think so as
well.)
The production of Archduke
revealed two artists possessed with complementary sensibilities. It’s like they are imagining with the same
brain, reminiscent of (playwright) Neil Simon and (director) Mike Nichols, the
director lifting the writer’s intentions to a celestial level. (Most Notable Example: The Odd
Couple.)
Archduke’s Second
Act was diminishingly impressive, maybe because I eventually tired of stylistical
“conceit”, maybe because they ran out of imaginative variations, or maybe the
plot – derived from history whose actual outcome is therefore unalterable –
Davy Crockett died at the Alamo, the Archduke took one in the head in Sarajevo
– I mean, we are heading for a “pre-known” resolution, so so much for the elevating
suspense.
At any rate – and this was a “World Premier” so there may be
ameliorating rewrites down the line – you see a crackling First Act – you’ve
had a pretty good night at the theater.
(I recall the memorable First Act of Sweet
Charity. The Second Act was Michelangelo
handing the brushes to his apprentices, but oh, that wonderful First Act.)
In one night, our shaken faith in the theater was gloriously
restored.
We just have to steer clear of those theatrical packages.
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