
Temptation
Forest
Innocent
lust and the dangers of 18th century thought
BY
SUZI STEFFEN
Faux-irony, knowing winks and moments of hilarity
pervade Marivaux's La Dispute, now playing at the UO's Arena
Theater.
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| Carise
(Shizuka Moon) reassures Eglé (Hannah Hickman). Photo courtesy
of UO Dept. of Theatre Arts |
In the 18th century, you'll remember from Western
history class, the Enlightenment loomed on the horizon. We celebrate
that time when humankind released itself from the tyranny of the
divine right of kings. Of course, as the order shook up, those in
power imposed, instead, human bondage, bizarre experimentation and
"scientific" examination on people of other classes and races.
But hey, the world was their playground, and it
was heck of fun.
That's the time period when La Dispute was
written, and the time period it reflects. The content reminded me
of two books: Lawrence Weschler's Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonders,
a work of nonfiction about European mania for collecting other cultures,
and M. T. Anderson's The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing,
a book of fiction about the capacity to regard other humans as possessions.
But Marivaux's humorous work, as he intended, stays
light as the pastry of a profiterole. Campy and overblown from James
Engberg's director's note to Lilli Turner's costumes, this production
exudes arch pretension. Yet the hour-long work passes pleasantly
enough as the audience laughs at the Romper-Room-gone-mad eyebrows
of a noblewoman and the decapitation of innocent greenery. And the
students performing in a riot of goofy destruction certainly seem
to enjoy themselves.
In Marivaux's time, working from Locke's theory
of the mind as a blank slate and from Rousseau's ideas of "natural
man," various nobles ran "scientific" experiments on their social
inferiors. That's not funny, we might think, but Marivaux uses that
craze for experimentation ironically. His take on gender appeals
to modern audiences for its now-transgressive essentialism, exploited
in a muddled way at the UO by the use of camp and queer theory.
The play begins with a framing device. Enter two
nobles — the woman, Hermiane (Rachael Davies), sporting those
crazed eyebrows and an outfit combining the worst of 18th and 21st
century fashion, and her haughty, white-powdered prince (Kevin Coubal).
Their exquisitely artificial wigs point up their status as members
of Civilization. These two have been arguing at court about whether
men or women are more likely to cheat on each other. The Prince
invites Hermiane to sit and watch this dispute in real time.
How? Twenty years earlier at his father's court,
a similar argument occurred. Those nobles took four babies away
from their families and raised them without any contact with other
humans (including each other) save two foreign caretakers (Carisè,
played by Shizuka Moon, and Mesrou, played by Logan Cole). Now the
young people will meet. Because they were formed without ideas of
other humans, the Prince says, their interactions will prove something
about the state of natural gender roles — and provide an answer
to the debate.
The plot provides many opportunities for laughs,
and the performers, deliberately overacting and taking wicked pleasure
in the gradual annihilation of the set, leap (often literally) at
the chance. Eglé (Hannah Hickman), the first young person to
come on stage, meets Azor (Jake Pippin), who falls for her immediately.
But Eglé's narcissistic self-regard means more to her than
does Azor, despite her attraction to him.
Men adore; woman are adored, and when women meet
— as when Eglé meets Adine (Jessica Graff) — they
fight. But when Azor and Mesrin (Craig Lamm) run into each other,
they hit it off in slightly homoerotic fashion even as they proclaim
adoration for their girlfriends. Complications ensue, but, with
a trashed set, a new world for the youth and another amusement for
the royal group, all ends pretty well.
Except that the young people remain playthings of
the nobles, and except that the servants/caretakers are the only
people of color in the cast. Those uncomfortable reminders of injustice
and slavery smack against the neatly wrapped narrative. Still, it's
not impossible to laugh during the play and consider its implications
later. Besides, La Dispute provides an affordable, enjoyable
date night opportunity in the middle of a theater season fraught
with intensity. Just watch out for flying shrubbery.
La Dispute continues Nov. 1-3 at the UO's Arena
Theatre in Villard Hall. Tix available at 346-4363.
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