
The
Big Absurdity
Collaborative
Threepenny Opera makes the grade
BY
SUZI STEFFEN
Beggars can't be choosers — or so runs conventional
wisdom. But even if you're feeling the pinch of a slowing economy,
Threepenny Opera would be a choice seat.
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| MacHeath
(Chip Sherman) watches Polly (Rachel O'Malley) learn his "business".
PHOTO: UO DEPT OF THEATRE ARTS |
The combined UO/LCC production shows off a smart
contemporary translation of the original Bertolt Brecht play. A
few strong singers in the cast backed by a tight small orchestra
also make Kurt Weill's most popular music shine anew. And that's
not even counting the production values — the complex, virtuoso
set, the incisive lighting, the staging that incorporates every
portion of LCC's utilitarian Performance Hall and thoroughly dissolves
the fourth wall. The second act founders a bit on the shoals of
slow scenes and an unfortunately sophomoric climax, but overall,
students from both schools pull off this multifaceted show.
Brecht and Weill borrowed the plot from an early
18th century piece called The Beggar's Opera by satirist
John Gay. Using the characters of highway robber MacHeath and stolen
goods receiver Peachum, Gay poked serious fun at his government's
corruption. Brecht's play hews faithfully to Gay's work, but he
updated it to the reign of Queen Victoria and brought in the brilliant
Weill to write songs.
In 1954, a version of Threepenny opened on
Broadway, and many lefties and musical fans grew up with the lyrics
of that production. But directors Joseph Gilg (from the UO) and
Patrick Torelle (from LCC) chose to stage a mid-'90s update from
British translators Robert David MacDonald (book) and Jeremy Sams
(lyrics).
This one generally tracks with contemporary sensibilities,
speaking directly of exploitation, virginity, whores and abortion.
One problem: There's a rather cynical message that beggars plot
ways to earn human sympathy and money. In Eugene, where it's hard
not to get fed up with street folk aggressively pursuing change,
this idea runs counter to the point the actors and directors intend
to make about helping the poor.
With a Brecht play, the seams should show, and here,
they do. The actors interact with the audience, sitting in the house
when they're not in the action. Supertitles perform the heroic act
of forcing the audience into self-awareness. Some props have huge
labels on them (the most absurd being the gun with a dangling tag
reading "GUN"). And the well constructed scenery doesn't get changed
in the dark; actors move it around even as they're starting new
scenes. Oh, and the audience once gets to sing along, a device that
fits well with the continual exaggeration of Rachel O'Malley as
Polly Peachum and Kelsey Chun as Lucy Brown.
Both vocal majors with gorgeous instruments, O'Malley
and Chun await applause and take their bows as if Threepenny
were an actual opera. Their voices usually rivet the audience; only
in their duet do they lose articulation and focus. O'Malley especially
wins kudos for her killer "Pirate Jenny." That's a song often sung
by prostitute Jenny Driver (Megan Joy, who belts it out in her own
less polished but eerily staged "Mack the Knife"), but it makes
sense for Polly to display a potential dark side. And when Jenny
sings Sams' translation of "Mack the Knife," her later betrayal
of him makes more sense: Mack's a cold-blooded killer.
The seven-person orchestra, led by Hung-Yun Chu
with brio and absolute musical fidelity from the keyboard, knits
the piece together. Chip Sherman, playing the central character
of MacHeath, throws his large voice around with controlled menace
and uses his lithe body to project his character as a true toff.
When he's not onstage (as in about half of the second act), things
aren't as interesting — except when J.J. Peachum (Chas King)
holds forth. Those two combine strong acting skills with good singing
voices and the ability to impel audience attention. Of the minor
characters, John Jeffrey makes Matt the Minter sympathetic, and
Stephanie Brubaker holds her own as Smith, the easily tempted warden.
A few issues stalk the production. Some actors aren't
compelling; Patrick O'Driscoll doesn't quite have the singing chops
for his role as police chief Tiger Brown; and Ryan Primm should
not be mugging so much as Reverend Kimball. The finale, which uses
a deus ex machina (or rather rex ex machina) to save
MacHeath, throws in much silliness about Consumer-Driven Life In
Wartime.
But this remains a bold show, a robust production
full of stylish choices that should win converts to this new translation
and herald an era of interschool cooperation.
The
Threepenny Opera continues Nov. 15-16 at LCC. Get there early;
the ticket folks aren't smooth, and the show begins at 7:30 pm.
Tix available at 346-4363.
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