Norse drama with a Latin flair
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Tom Titus
From the fjords of Norway to the pueblos of Mexico is quite a
cultural transformation, but that’s where UC Irvine has gone with
Henrik Ibsen’s classic, “Peer Gynt.”
Drama professors Robert Cohen and Douglas-Scott Goheen have taken
the Norwegian epic and reworked it into a multilingual saga in the
mountains of Michoacan. It’s been retitled “Pedro Gynt,” and it
opened Thursday for a two-weekend run in UCI’s Humanities Hall Little
Theater.
The locale may be strikingly different, but the plot is basically
the same -- a narcissistic scoundrel faces an odyssey of
self-discovery as he travels around the world over many years before
finally returning home. It’s a journey that director Cohen believes
provides many opportunities for his cast, crew and the audience.
“It’s a play that is particularly ripe,” Cohen said. “The original
examines profoundly, and with great eloquence, vital modern issues --
cultural identity and assimilation, transnational economics and
patrimonies, emigration and return, and the search for universal,
meaningful life values in an increasingly secular global
environment.”
The director is promising a “truly cross-border experience
appealing to audiences both in Mexico and California.” To augment
this, he’s added dance and music (with a score by Mitch Greenhill) to
a script that’s now a hybrid of English and Spanish.
Cohen and Goheen hope eventually to take the show on a Latin
American tour, where any staging would be about 80% Spanish and 20%
English. This emphasis is reversed at UCI, where the show will be 80%
in English.
But won’t viewers be confused? Cohen thinks not, since he’s
carefully mixed the languages into the storytelling and offers
visuals that move the plot along. Sort of, one assumes, like South
Coast Repertory’s annual staging of “La Posada Magica.”
Essential to this goal is Goheen’s scenic design, a large
tent-like canopy dominating the arena staging and encompassing both
actors and audience. Mexican-flavored imagery is projected on this
“cosmic canopy” for atmospheric effect and to clearly establish sense
of place.
For those familiar with the original “Peer Gynt” -- which can
occupy an audience for upwards of five hours -- don’t worry about
getting home after midnight. Cohen has taken a surgeon’s scalpel to
the script, paring his staging to about 100 minutes.
“I don’t think we’ve lost anything of the original’s poetry and
power,” he said. “All the important soliloquies are in place and the
story is beautifully told. I have to say that I’m very pleased with
the results.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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