“Oedipus” director goes to the source for authenticity
Tom Titus
Drama? The Greeks had a word for it. Several words, in fact, and Tom
Amen knows them all.
Golden West College’s theater instructor and director will tell you
that our word “theater” springs from the Greeks’ “theatron,” or “seeing
place,” a grassy hillside or a raked seating arrangement. That the
“orchestra” or “dancing place,” is the primary focus of action, and the
“skene” is a “scene house” in front of which the action takes place, and
from which the main characters enter and exit.
Amen knows these things, partly, because he’s been to Greece three
times in the past three years researching ways to make Greek theater more
accessible to modern audiences and, at the same time, give that audience
a feel for what the plays may have looked and sounded like when first
produced in ancient times.
The culmination of that research will be unveiled on the Golden West
College stage this weekend in a production of Sophocles’ “Oedipus Rex.”
It is a project, which excites Amen to no end.
“I have always been captivated by the myths of ancient Greece,” he
explains, “beginning with my grandfather, who used to tell me these
stories as a child, and later, through studying under the late H. Wynn
Pearce at Saddleback College.”
“Oedipus Rex” was the first play Amen ever read, and he credits Pearce
with making the Greek theater come to life.
Now Amen is prepared to take his own crack at Greek drama in the form
of the classic tragedy of Oedipus. And between himself and master set
designer Sigrid Hammer Wolf, the Golden West production should reek of
authenticity.
“The overall scene design was influenced by the Theater of Herodus
Atticus in Athens, which is an excellent example of the Greco-Roman style
of theater architecture,” Amen declares. “This same theater is still in
use today, and regularly produced ancient Greek drama.”
In terms of the text, he admits, the college production will
incorporate a number of adjustments and cuts to make it more playable.
“It maintains its formality, yet it is a bit more familiar in its
style,” Amen explains. “My goal was to try to find a way to use the
elevated dialogue of the play, while finding ways to make it fit with the
way a contemporary method actor works. I think we’ve done that.
“In terms of the costumes, my designer, Robin Whitney, and I wanted to
create a sense of the visual spectacle that was so much a part of Greek
drama,” he notes. “We have chosen to be very bold in our costume designs,
straying from any literal representation of reality and moving toward a
more stylized, presentational and theatrical treatment.”
Golden West’s “Oedipus” won’t be employing masks, as the original
Greeks did -- primarily to hide the fact that one actor was playing many
parts. But the makeup, he promises, will be very elaborate, virtually
“accomplishing the same thing while allowing the audience to see agreater
range of facial expression from the actors.”
One reason few theater companies tackle the ancient Greeks today is
the preconception that the presentation would come off as “a history
lesson, one that is ‘good for you’ and at the same time, incredibly
dull,” according to Amen, who vows to avoid that sensation in
his”Oedipus.”
“In terms of the message of the play, I believe that Sophocles is
warning his audience against arrogance and excessive pride,” Amen
declares. “When the play was written, Athens was in the midst of an
incredible rise to power and dominance. I think audiences at the
timewould have been able to see that Sophocles had chosen to explore the
myth of Oedipus as an allegorical story that was applicable to his own
time.”
Golden West audiences will get the chance to see what Sophocles, and
Amen, had in mind when “Oedipus Rex” opens Friday for six performances.
After all, the Greeks not only had a word for it, they invented it.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
WHAT: “Oedipus Rex”
WHERE: Golden West College Mainstage Theater
WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday and March 14, 15 & 16; 3 p.m. Sunday,
March 10
COST: $8.50 - $10.50
PHONE: (714) 895-8150
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