Gripping Greek tragedy at SCR
Tom Titus
Greek tragedy has been conspicuous by its near-total absence on the
local theater scene over the years, but if any producing organization
were brave enough to take a crack it this oldest of theatrical art
forms, it most assuredly would be South Coast Repertory.
Yet, even a modern-dress interpretation of “Antigone” with
infinite technical embellishments still is a pretty heavy piece of
entertainment, and not all of SCR’s regular patrons will be
mesmerized by the result. It’s a powerful, gripping production that
will leave playgoers puzzled as to why the Sophocles’ characters make
the choices they do.
Well, when you’re the daughter of Oedipus and his wife -- who also
was his mother -- you may be expected to behave somewhat
irrationally, particularly when both your warring, rival brothers
have been killed in combat and your uncle, who now calls the shots in
Thebes, orders the burial of one, but not the other.
This is the quandary facing Antigone, and for her it’s no
predicament at all. Her brother deserves a decent burial, and she
vows to do the job herself, in blatant defiance of Uncle Creon’s
directive. To say that causes a rift in the family circle would be an
understatement of Earth-shattering proportions.
At SCR, director Kate Whoriskey has created a sort of
post-apocalyptic Thebes, strewn with Styrofoam chunks of coal about
the futuristically gloomy set designed by Walt Spangler, who also
came up with the primarily 21st century costumes. Scott Zielinski’s
darkly hued lighting designs keep the atmosphere properly funereal.
The largest challenge is creating audience empathy, and here
Alyssa Bresnahan scores mightily in the title role. Bresnahan hits
the stage running, in full outrageous throttle as she vows to bury
her brother, even if it almost certainly means her own death, in a
gloriously melodramatic performance.
Her adversary, Creon -- who commands a Hitler-like admiration from
his subjects and demands no less from family members -- receives a
powerfully one-dimensional performance from Randle Mell. His
singleness of purpose melts only after it is too late, in a closing
capitulation designed to further shatter viewers’ hearts.
Beyond these two principals, there are dynamic individual
performances in what are glorified cameo roles. Chief among them is
Eric D. Steinberg’s gut-wrenching portrayal of Haemon, Creon’s son
and Antigone’s fiance. Nambi E. Kelley richly enacts Ismene,
Antigone’s sister, who’s willing to share the blame.
What humor this play possesses is projected by Henri Lubatti as an
obsequious guard who rats out Antigone mainly to cover his own rear
end. Veteran SCR actor Hal Landon Jr. has a spooky moment as a blind
prophet who softens Creon’s heart, while Deborah Van Valkenburgh
regally enacts Creon’s distraught wife.
“Antigone” is a verbal and visual banquet for the theater scholar,
but it quite likely will discomfit the company’s regular patrons. In
either case, it is a powerfully gripping example of the oldest form
of theater.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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