Funny
in Love and War Smokin'
villian, intense wit mark OSU's Ado BY
SUZI STEFFEN
Benedick
(Sean Boyd) and Beatrice (Maggie Chapin) rehearse their wisecracks
Shakespeare's been around for a while, so over the
past four centuries, directors and actors valiantly have attempted
to keep the well-known scripts fresh. OSU's Scott Palmer takes the
familiar (to those who have watched the Kenneth Branagh/Emma Thompson
movie) plot and words of Much Ado About Nothing and adds
song, dance, poetry and letters from the mid-1940s to set the play
in the U.S. at the end of WWII. Though the actors are fewer than
usual (Palmer has rid the script of groundling-sop Dogsberry), the
cast comes in at 50 thanks to the swing dancers. In the lush, well-ordered
Memorial Union Quad, with the waxing moon travelling across the
sky behind the neoclassical building's dome, Much Ado serves
as a pleasant diversion, well worth the inexpensive ticket and a
trip to Beaver country.
Last year's Romeo and Juliet, Palmer's first
"Bard in the Quad" production, played out on the steps of the MU.
In moving away from the building, Palmer and his designers gained
the advantages of more seating and the challenges of a much larger
space. With actors dancing, running, bicycling and even driving
down the eight sidewalks that run through the quad, Palmer sets
up a wide swath for the action, especially during the first act
when the outside light proves sufficient to see the characters.
The set provides smart touches of the time, with gazebos decorated
with WWII propaganda posters, flags draped over the balustrade of
the Memorial Union and set in the ground lining the sidewalks. The
excellent costumes (designed by Barbara Mason) reinforce the era
of the mid-1940s.
At the heart of any production of Much Ado
lie the characters of Beatrice and Benedick. Yes, there's a love
story of sorts between the young hero Claudio and his love Hero,
with some ridiculous drama about the question of Hero's virginity
and her father's honor; this plot not only offends modern sensibilities,
it lacks compelling characters. When the plot returns to the interplay
of B&B, the audience sighs in relief.
Beatrice (Maggie Chapin), a noblewoman whose parents
have died and who lives with her uncle, provides entertainment with
her whipcrack wit. Chapin pulls off Beatrice's early monologue with
joy and élan, and her humorous scenes with Benedick (Sean Boyd)
provide the best parts of the night. Boyd can't quite keep up with
Chapin, but he has amusing scenes of his own. Action goes slack
during the moments when the two antagonists declare their love (even
with Palmer's gutsy substitution of WWII poetry that explicitly
outlines the tragedy of working women being fired when the men came
home), but interest picks up when the two again have an audience
for their insults during the final scene.
Hero (Caren Parmenter) looks the part of a young
woman in the 1940s, and Parmenter deals well with Hero's annoying
whiny scenes. Claudio (Jason Myers) should be younger and far sweeter
than Myers acts; in addition, Myers must learn to enunciate.
His rushed diction doesn't work for the character or with iambic
pentameter.
On the other hand, experienced actor Robert Hirsh
plays Hero's father and Beatrice's uncle Leonato with calm command
both of the role and his relationship to other actors. It's a delicate
part because Leonato must switch attitudes so quickly, and Hirsh
rises to the task. Tall, skinny Jonathan Pederson doesn't quite
work as the commanding Don Pedro; that's more to do with casting
than with Pederson. The villain Don John (Peter Platt), like so
many of Shakespeare's villains, has the flimsiest of backstories
to explain his anger, but Platt performs the part with consummate
skill. His disdain for Don Pedro and Claudio shines through, his
delight in destroying Hero's reputation as malevolent as his sneering
countenance requires. In a wry touch, Don John, alone among the
major characters, smokes — clear evidence of villainy.
Palmer found a reference to a character called Innogen
in one of the Much Ado folios; he brings her in to open the
play and at several other points to speak "proto-feminist WWII poetry."
Vanessa Oberlin, playing Innogen, needs to ramp down her supposed
anguish, but her part provides texture and unfulfilled longing,
giving more depth to the historical setting. The swing dancers,
who scared the audience when the men weren't prepared to support
their partners, distract from the action but give that patented
summer theater feel to the evening. So bring a picnic, lawn chairs
and warm blankets, and enjoy the wit and warmth of Palmer's interpretation
of the classic.
Much
Ado About Nothing's start time is 7 pm; the run continues
July 26-29 and August 1-5. For tix, call 541-737-2784. Word is that
it's selling out quickly; call soon!
Opening
Nights
Free to Be … You and Me
Opens at the Mad Duckling Children's Theatre in
Island Park Tuesday, July 31.
Really? They're putting on Free to Be …
You and Me? Does that mean wistful parents of all genders and
creativity levels will be accompanying their mind-blown children
to the theater? Does that mean the uptight gender police will back
off again on little kids who like dolls and trucks, cooking and
earning money equally — or not at all? We sure as shootin'
hope so. Show dates are 11 am July 31-August 4 in Island Park and
August 7-11 at Amazon Park. Tix available by calling 346-4192 or
at the, er, "door."