It’s Miller time once more for SCR’s Benson
Tom Titus
When it comes to plays by recently departed Arthur Miller, few local
directors have a resume to match Martin Benson’s at South Coast
Repertory.
Benson has staged Miller’s masterwork, “Death of a Salesman,”
twice, and also has put “All My Sons” and “The Crucible” on the
Repertory boards. Next weekend, he’ll reveal his fourth Miller show,
“A View From the Bridge,” on the theater’s Segerstrom Stage.
“I remember having heated discussions in school about whether or
not tragedy can exist if it’s not happening to a king,” Benson said.
“And my first instinctive reaction was that even if the guy’s a
butcher, it’s still a tragedy to him.”
In “A View From the Bridge,” the central character of Eddie
Carbone -- to be played by South Coast Repertory veteran and founding
artist Richard Doyle -- never would be mistaken for royalty. He’s a
dockworker, with an unhealthy attachment to his niece, and he becomes
furious when she takes a shine to one of two Italian immigrants who
move under the Carbone roof in a cramped Brooklyn apartment.
“The whole idea that characters have to be elevated to some lofty,
near-divine level in the world for tragedy to take place is just
plain nonsense,” the director declared. “‘View From the Bridge’ is a
perfect example.
“Miller’s first version of ‘View’ was written in blank verse,
which you can tell because much of the language -- especially [the
lawyer] Alfieri’s -- is still very poetic. The dialogue is just
brilliantly written in argot of the people, with its street slang and
curiously bad construction.
“Miller has his characters speaking in double negatives and
breaking all the rules of sentence structure, but he does it in such
a lovely way. It’s beautiful.”
“A View From the Bridge” was written in the mid-1950s, and Benson
believes South Coast Repertory audiences will need to overcome their
2005 sensibilities, because “the Italy of today bears little
resemblance to the desperate, poverty-ravaged place it was following
World War II.
“Remember, there was intense fighting in Italy from 1942 to ‘45,”
he said. “Three long years of relentless, brutal warfare. First, it
was conquered by Mussolini, then the Allies attacked, coming through
Sicily. Then the Germans moved in to prop up Mussonlini after the
Italian army collapsed and when they retreated, they burned whatever
they could to keep it out of Allied hands. Then we blew up everything
in our path as we moved forward. The country was devastated, and
America must have truly seemed like the Promised Land.”
It is against this back-story that Miller’s “Bridge” plays out
near the New York waterfront, in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge,
with suppressed violence constantly prevalent. Add to this the
traditional Italian quickness on the trigger, figuratively and
literally, and the stage is set for a powder keg of conflict.
Joining Doyle in the cast are Daisy Eagan as the young Catherine;
Elizabeth Ruscio as Eddie’s wife, Beatrice; David Barry Gray and
Anthony Cistaro as the young Italian “submarines;” and another South
Coast Repertory founding artist, Hal Landon Jr., as Alfieri.
“A View From the Bridge” opens May 28 following a week of previews
and will be staged through June 26 in the South Coast Repertory
theater, 550 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets may be ordered by
calling the box office at (714) 708-5555.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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