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Category: drama posts (page 1 of 3)

THE MANDALORIAN – A SCI-FI QUEST FOR INTIMACY

The Mandalorian with Baby Yoda

The Mandalorian on foot with blaster, forked rifle, and cargo

The first words of Mando – the armored bounty hunter in the Disney streaming series THE MANDALORIAN – offer a choice to one of his quarries. “I can bring you in warm or bring you in cold.”  The words are delivered with the familiar tone and timber of Clint Eastwood.  An  arid statement of fact implying no preference from a speaker largely covered in metal. The knight-like visor reveals nothing of his face, not even eyes.

At the receiving end of the directive is Mythrol, an alien bail jumper.   From his lagoon-creature face and blue pigment – he may be cold-blooded anyway.

Very cleverly, “warm or cold” recalls “Wanted Dead or Alive” posters of the Wild West. This opening reference is an auspicious set-up for an American Space Western television web series. During the eight manic episodes of  Season One, there are numerous fight scenes and shoot outs in futuristic outer-world equivalents of cantinas.

More than once the action recalls the climatic scene of Sam Peckinpah’s THE WILD BUNCH, with its commandeered machine gun spraying a circle of bullets. Mando even learns to ride a Blurrg on the desert planet Arvala-7, by showing tenderness and gaining the animal’s trust. Never mind that the Blurrg has a face more like the moon than a horse.

Space Western it is, firmly rooted in the Star Wars universe. And yet THE MANDALORIAN proves to be so much more.

To begin with, the protagonist Mando’s look is an aggregate of medieval knight, steppe warrior of the Genghis Khan era, and Marvel superhero Iron Man.

Show creator and screenwriter Jon Favreau – he of COWBOYS AND ALIENS, IRON MAN I & II and a remake of THE LION KING – gives us a Sci-Fi series with a gorgeous soundtrack by Ludvig Goransson and visual splendor that takes its cinematic cues from many seminal films.

Chapter 4 “Sanctuary” borrows its plot and look from one of the most influential films in movie history – the 1954 Akira Kurosawa classic SEVEN SAMURAI.

In Chapter 5 “The Gunslinger,” Mando and a novice bounty hunter ride anti-gravity speeder bikes through the Dune Sea on Tatooine – an excursion that recalls the chopper riding in biker movies like EASY RIDER.

The influences of THE MANDALORIAN are many. Yet the series seldom feels unfocussed or lacking in identity. (The exception is one of the episodes that Favreau didn’t write, Chapter 6 “The Prisoner.”)

What, then, holds this series together? What is it about the show that keeps the viewer curious moment by moment? Or, in other words, what is the true subject of THE MANDALORIAN?

For many, I think, it’s  the slow movement toward intimacy within the protagonist. The emotional temperature of this Tin Man in search of a heart.   “I can bring you in warm or I can bring you in cold.”

By the time we get to Chapter 5, the line is repeated with Mando on the receiving end. He has violated the code of the Bounty Hunter Guild on behalf of “The Child” and rescued a bounty – known to fans as Baby Yoda – from certain death at the hands of “The Client.” Continue reading

VLADIMIR NABOKOV’S “THE TRAGEDY OF MISTER MORN”

Young Vladimir Nabokov

Nabokov wrote THE TRAGEDY OF MISTER MORN at 24

THE PLAY THAT SHOWS NABOKOV’S  EARLY GENIUS

Vladimir Nabokov’s first major work, THE TRAGEDY OF MR. MORN was written in the winter of 1923-24 in Prague when Nabokov was twenty-four. After completing the play in January, he wrote in a letter he felt like a house just emptied of its grand piano.  And what a grand piano it is, full of music and wonder.

Two years later he wrote Mary, the first of nine novels written in Russian.  Other Russian novels include King, Queen, Knave (1928), The Luzhin Defense (1930), Glory (1932), Laughter in the Dark (1933), Despair (1934), Invitation to a Beheading (1936), and The Gift (1938).

Having already fled Russia and Germany, Nabokov became a refugee again in 1940 when he was forced to leave France for the United States.  In the U.S. he taught at Wellesley, Harvard, and Cornell.  He began writing novels in English with The Real Life of Sebastian Knight in 1941.  He followed up with Bend Sinister (1947), Lolita (1955), Pnin (1957), Pale Fire (1962), Ada (1969), Transparent Things (1972), and Look at the Harlequins (1974).

On the Modern Library list of best 100 novels written in English, Lolita is number four and Pale Fire is fifty-two. Vladimir and Vera Nabokov were married for over fifty years and they had one child, Dmitri. In 1961 the Nabokovs moved to Montreux, Switzerland where he lived until the end of his life in 1977.

author in car

Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977) in a car window with pencil and note cards.

THE TRAGEDY OF MISTER MORN is set in an imaginary country, part fairy-tale kingdom with an atmosphere like Shakespeare’s Verona or Venice, part post-revolutionary Russia. Before the action of the play begins, a mysterious and benevolent king has ruled anonymously, behind a black mask.  Four years ago this king quelled a rebellion and has restored peace and prosperity to a troubled land. The leader of the revolution, Tremens, remains free though his friends “suffer in black exile” because the king views Tremens as a magnet for “the scattered needles, the revolutionary souls” who can be gathered up.

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MOTHER ROLE IN “DAYS IN THE TREES” RIVALS LEAR

Marguerite Duras, Author of DAYS IN THE TREE featured the strong role of Mother in her play
DAYS IN THE TREES Author Marguerite Duras created the role of Mother

A King Lear-like role for a mature woman exists.  In DAYS IN THE TREES, by Marguerite Duras.   A character referred to only as Mother is so domineering she authors a tragic role for herself that Shakespeare may have envied.  Unlike Brecht’s play Mother Courage and Her Children, DAYS IN THE TREES is seldom produced.  This is woeful, an indictment of our stodgy regard for staging drama.  Now that life has slowed down for many of us theatre folk on lockdown—consider this neglected play.

THE KEY FIGURE IN THE LIFE AND WORK OF DURAS

Marguerite Duras (1914-96) was born weeks before the outbreak of World War I.  Her birthplace is Gia-Dinh near Saigon in what is now Southern Vietnam–then part of the French Colony Cochinchina.  After her father died of amoebic dysentery, Marguerite was brought up with her two brothers by her mother.  Her mother Marie Legrand decided to stay on in Indochina.  She made a humble living as a teacher and by playing the piano for silent films.  Later acquiring land on the Cambodian coast.  The land turned out to be worthless.  She went bankrupt trying in vain to build dams to protect her rice paddies against the yearly advance of the sea.  Owing to this, the mother is the key figure in the life and work of Marguerite Duras.  

As Jean-Louis Arnaud has written, “The mother figure in The Sea Wall (1950) can be found thirty years later in The Lover, always the same, plain-spoken, courageous and obstinate to the point of absurdity in her choices and her prejudices; loved and hated, respected and denigrated all at once.” 

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MANIAC: REFLECTIONS ON A TRIPPY TV SERIES

Emma Stone, Jonah Hill in MANIAC

Netflix Mini-Series MANIAC Poster, wtih Emma Stone and Jonah Hill

If you’re looking for a platonic tryst with a Netflix mini-series, try MANIAC. You may have already sampled it (since its premier on Sept. 21, 2018) and found it slow in the beginning episodes. This gradual unfolding is by design. From the get-go episode “The Chosen One,” MANIAC doesn’t seek to thrill, scare, or romance. The show just wants to be friends.

To use Aldous Huxley’s term, we are each “island universes.” And this state of disconnect with potential is early MANIAC in a nutshell. Friendships take time and the mini-series takes its time to establish an almost-reality setting, the tension of its disconnect / connect theme, and its complex central characters. The schizophrenic Owen Milgrim. The anti-social Annie Landsberg.

All said, this sci-fi drama-comedy is more satisfying than any TV I’ve seen in a while. I watched MANIAC twice through. And thought twice, even enjoyed the dense first episode much more the second time.

Created by Patrick Somerville and Cary Joji Fukunaga, the ten-episode series follows Annie (Emma Stone) and Owen (Jonah Hill).  Miserable strangers until they meet through a high-risk experimental drug trial. Through the trial the protagonists experience a complex mixture of biographical and genre-hopping hallucinations.

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ABANDON ALL HOPE YE WHO ENTER HERE

 

Hope lives on

Robert Indiana’s HOPE sculpture and Chase (formerly Chemical) Bank in the Theatre District of New York City

HOPE, THE BANK, AND AMERICAN PYSCHO

There’s the hope of Emily Dickinson’s poem.  “Hope is the thing with feathers.”    And there’s HOPE.  The work of the late pop-artist Robert Indiana on 7th Avenue and 53rd Street.  The four letter sculpture with its two tiers.  The “O” leaning forward.

Compared to LOVE (on 55th and 6th Avenue) HOPE is the wallflower emotion.  Maybe hope is just too broad, too accommodating.  One can hope to find love.  But can one love to find hope?   Sounds like madness.  Like the theme of an under-rated recent Broadway musical that ran for just ten weeks.

If you’re a theatre aficionado with a dark side you saw the short-lived American Psycho  (Spring 2016).  Or as an intrepid  fiction-reader you may have read  Bret Easton Ellis’s controversial novel that the musical is based on.

If so, it must seem a wild coincidence to see the HOPE statue positioned on the corner near a Chase Manhattan branch. This especially if you were around in the eighties when Chemical Banks were ubiquitous in New York.  Before Chemical acquired Chase Manhattan Bank in 1996 and adopted its name.

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RETURNING TO REIMS

RETURNING TO REIMS

RETURNING TO REIMS, based on the memoir of Didier Eribon, directed by Thomas Ostermeier, featuring Nina Hoss

WAKE UP AND SMELL THE COFFEE

A THINK TWICE DRAMA VIEW

As remarkable as RETURNING TO REIMS is for what it does, it is even more surprising for what it doesn’t.

RETURNING TO REIMS doesn’t entertain or pander to the consumer in us as commercial theatre does . . . Rather, it awakens our interest in our own lives.

It doesn’t attempt to transform its audience into a gratified mob satisfied that theatrical justice has been exacted . . . It appeals to each of us as individuals capable of taking actions beyond the stage that are divergent, positive, and necessary.

It doesn’t rely on standard plot progression and escalating conflict to hold our interest and to arrive at a payoff . . . It values discussion and agreement over conflict and story closure.

It doesn’t fall into a reassuring pattern of satire and vitriol against the present . . . It doesn’t vent at easy targets.  It addresses the current state of global politics through reminding us of the recent past.

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NEW HEART & FURY FROM ADRIENNE KENNEDY

HE BROUGHT HER HEART BACK IN A BOX--Adrienne Kennedy

Adrienne Kennedy

A THINK TWICE DRAMA worth the wait:

HE BROUGHT HER HEART BACK IN A BOX

The sad, aching thing about Adrienne Kennedy’s new play set in the Jim Crow South of 1941 is how relevant it is today to our divided nation. This disturbing and haunted one act–produced by Theatre for a New Audience–is the world premiere of the first new Adrienne Kennedy play in almost a decade.

HE BROUGHT HER HEART BACK IN A BOX is a two-character dramatic recital as cerebral and deep as anything you may experience on the stage.  Under the often sweet surface, HEART simmers with rage against the violence of segregation and abuse of power in wartime Montefiore, Georgia.  And well beyond.

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THINK TWICE REVIEW: PEOPLE PLACES & THINGS

 Irony of Irony: PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS at ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE

A Doctor tries to hand medication to the patient Emma in PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS

credit: Johan Persson

The American Premiere of Duncan Macmillan’s PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS at St. Ann’s Warehouse is a thought piece and a gutsy gorgeous thing to behold.  It is also darkly comic.  The play opens meta-theatrically, in mid-sentence. 

And we aren’t the audience we thought we were.  We find ourselves well within another play.  Act IV, the concluding pages of Chekhov’s frequently-produced The Seagull. 

The heroine/anti-heroine Emma of PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS is playing Chekhov’s actress Nina to harrowing and comic effect.  This as we shift our expectations to accommodate an excerpt from this late 19th century work.  It is clear that Emma (a magnificent Denise Gough) is drunk on stage.  Her posture suggests a marionette with a couple of strings cut.  Emma has hit rock bottom during this performance.  As she fumbles to remember her lines, she begins to talk less in the character of Nina and more as herself.  The modes of reality between the role and the performer begin to blur.

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SUSAN LORI PARKS’ IN THE BLOOD, PART 2

THE COMIC TRAGIC TONE OF SUSAN LORI PARKS’ IN THE BLOOD 

Have you had the chance to see IN THE BLOOD by Susan Lori Parks?  BLOOD is playing now at the Signature Theatre. If so, what did you think? Please click the comment button under the title. It would be great to hear what you think of the play.

After first seeing and then reading BLOOD, there is so much I admire in this production. Though the subject has been drawn from Nathanial Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter, the tone of IN THE BLOOD is more complex than the novel’s relentlessly somber narrative.

It is well known that Hawthorne wrote the story of Hester Prynne, at least in part, to exorcise his guilt over the severity of the Puritan character in his seventeenth century ancestors in Salem. Some of whom participated in the Salem Witch Trials.

Hawthorne and Scarlett Letter

Inspiration for PARKS’ IN THE BLOOD: Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter

In reading excerpts of the novel it is discernable where Parks may have taken inspiration and reimagined the story’s components in modern terms. Before he introduces his readers to Hester Prynne, Hawthorne puts forward a representative of the law.

 

 

The door of the jail being flung open from within there appeared, in the first place, like a black shadow emerging into sunshine, the grim and gristly presence of the town-beadle, with a sword by his side, and his staff of office in his hand.

A policeman doesn’t appear in BLOOD.  But one is described chasing after what turns out to be his stolen policeman’s club. Which has been stolen by her son Trouble. Hester’s oldest daughter Bully describes what has transpired.

He had a big stomach. Like he was pregnant. He was jiggling and running and yelling and red in the face.

What is ominous for its symbolic and punitive qualities in Hawthorne’s lawman translates for Parks into comic imagery. (One can picture Oliver Hardy in hot pursuit.) But there’s more than comedy at stake. Once Hester takes the billy club away from her thieving son Trouble, she becomes the holder of this moral instrument.

Parks' IN THE BLOOD baby picture and billy club

Hester played by Saycon Sengbloh of Parks’ IN THE BLOOD with baby picture and billy club (photo by Joan Marcus)

Moreover, Hester will brandish the club at emotional peaks in the drama. The use of the word “pregnant” in the context of a male authority figure reverberates through out the play.  (The scenes with the Doctor, the Minister, and her First Boyfriend Chili.)  The “big-stomached” policeman’s authoritative, yet futile anger is passed like a baton.  To the angry mother of five who becomes increasingly desperate as the play goes.

What begins with slapstick imagery, reminiscent of silent films, is developed tragically as in the theater of Bertolt Brecht. Especially, as in Mother Courage and Her Children.   Parks’ Hester La Negrita is not fighting for survival on the sidelines of an historic European war, but during ordinary times in modern America. The androgynous image of the pregnant-looking policeman chasing Hester’s bastard child Trouble is central to the play.  The result of  his losing his policeman’s stick to Hester resonants through out.  It symbolizes the complicity of society, men and women, in evoking Hester’s tragedy.

Susan Lori Parks’ IN THE BLOOD: A THINK TWICE REVIEW

Review of Signature’s IN THE BLOOD by Susan Lori Parks

Red Letter Plays

Susan Lori Parks, IN THE BLOOD and FUCKING A are The Red Letter Plays, riffs on The Scarlet Letter

If you haven’t seen Susan Lori Parks’ IN THE BLOOD, it is time.  To go.  The Signature Theatre has launched a powerful and very timely revival of this important play.   IN THE BLOOD is a riff on Nathanial Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter.   It is that rare play that packs both an emotional and intellectual wallop.   A motherly one.   Somehow it  comes off as both timeless and composed from today’s news.

IN THE BLOOD was written twenty years ago and first performed at the Public Theater in 1999.  It is partly a conversation between authors from different eras.  Parks today and Hawthorne in 1850.  It is also a fierce indictment of an ageless problem.  False morality that serves opportunism.

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