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54. REVOLUTION IN THE ELBOW OF RAGNAR AGNARSSON FURNITURE PAINTER
54. REVOLUTION IN THE ELBOW OF RAGNAR AGNARSSON FURNITURE PAINTER
The subject of Iceland’s horrific financial crash
in 2008 would seem very far from what one might expect to see dramatized in a
New York show, but that’s exactly the inspiration behind a wonderful piece of
recent theatre art. Unfortunately, the show I’m referring to, SAGA, was performed
locally in March 2013, and, despite being a puppet play, was vastly superior to
the innocuous new rock musical based on the same crisis now
playing at the Minetta Lane Theatre. This is REVOLUTION IN THE ELBOW OF RAGNAR
AGNARSSON FURNITURE PAINTER, a work that never fulfills the imaginative
promise of its quirkily overstuffed title, and despite some flamboyant artistic
touches strewn here and there, wastes a generally talented cast featuring
stalwart Cady Huffman.
From left: Graydon Long, Marrick Smith, Brad Nacht. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Both SAGA and REVOLUTION, which I’ll call it for short, are highly theatricalized conceptual works that seek to explore
the ramifications of the monetary meltdown via nonrealistic, even surrealistic
means. As the show’s author (book, music, and lyrics), Ivar Pall Jonsson, told
the New York Times, he wanted to tell
the story without referencing “specific details and persons.” Executive
producer Gunnlaugur Jonsson, the author’s brother (who also contributed to the
story), said it was important to avoid being boring “because you have to
explain complicated things. Doing it abstractly in a world that doesn’t exist,
you can just get rid of all of that and get to the heart of the story.” All
well and good, but when you make such a choice you have to be able to realize
your conception in an artistically entertaining way. And sometimes simplicity leads to simplism.
The approach taken by SAGA is suggested in this
paragraph from my review of it.
SAGA, at the Baruch Performing Arts Center, is a
collaboration between Wakka Wakka Productions and the Nordland Visual Theatre
company. The result is an exceptionally powerful puppet play, filled with
tragedy, comedy, violence, and sex. Under the direction of Gwendolyn Warnock
and Kirjan Waage, half a dozen puppeteers, all dressed in black with huge
horse’s heads masking their faces, manipulate hand puppets and bunraku-like
puppets that resemble Jim Henson’s creations to tell a story set in Iceland in
2008, when that nation’s three major commercial banks collapsed, creating vast
economic turmoil. We see the effects of the crash on one family, the father,
Gunnar (Kirjan Waage); the mother, Helga (Andrea Osp Karlsdóttir); and their
boy, Oli (Andrew Manjuck). Led on by the predatory lending practices of the
banks, the family builds a large house, buys an expensive jeep, and in other
ways takes on crushing debt, only to have it all ripped away in the tidal wave
of financial ruin that crashes over them. Helga and Oli leave for Norway, where
she gets work, and the marriage falls apart. Gunnar, aided by what seems a
vengeful spirit of Iceland’s past, goes on a maniacal rampage against the
bankers and anyone else he feels created the problem, and bloody mayhem ensues;
even the spirit goading him on gets his. The story, although taking place in
distant Iceland, could as easily represent our own nation’s recent plight.
In REVOLUTION, when the audience enters it sees a
huge video projection on the upstage brick wall, and the metal scaffolding in
front of it, showing the middle-aged Ragnar loafing like the giant “couch
potato” he’s called in a voiceover. As the voiceover continues, a very
elaborate and well-executed series of projections informs us that there are
“many advanced societies” inside his body, and we see maps that takes us from
“the huge plains of Texass” to places like Eyesockette, Knee York, Hipsburg,
and the like, all the way to “the somewhat naïve backwater” of Elbowville,
“where the friendly inhabitants make their simple living fishing for gigantic
lobsters in the lymphatic channels.” Lobsters are a running image throughout, shown
on flags, coins, and even as a collar on an official’s cloak. “Heads or
lobsters?” asks someone when flipping a coin.
Kate Shindle, Brad Nacht. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Once we’re introduced to this allegorical world, the
joke quickly wears off and the efforts to milk it for laughs become
increasingly stomach-churning. There’s even a twee bit where a cold virus (a bluish
beach-ball covered with spiky protrusions rolled on stage by an oddly dressed
stage assistant) is treated as a cute pet dog called Gunnar. Nor must I neglect
to mention that because Ragnar owns a complete VHS collection of Robert Redford
movies, Bob is the god of Elbowville, and lives in a divine place called
Hollywood. In addition to the various scenes where his framed image is
projected on the rear wall, people are always saying “Oh, my Bob” when
something surprises them, or “Thank Bob,” when something good occurs. Of
course, some dare to go so far as to deny Bob’s existence.
Marrick Smith (front), with cast of REVOLUTION IN THE ELBOW OF RAGNAR AGNARSSON. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
The show begins with a powerful image of someone
blowing his brains out. This suicide serves as a sort of frame for the action,
and the show returns to it toward the end. Soon we learn of the history of
Elbowville, and of its founder’s legacy of “prosperity.” Enter the three young brothers, Peter
(Marrick Smith), Alex (Graydon Long), and Stein (Brad Nacht). A subplot emerges
when the shy Alex and Brynja (Jesse Wildman), Peter’s girlfriend, are attracted
to each other, setting up a brotherly rivalry. Fraternal relations involving
each brother will undergo severe stress because of Peter’s manipulations.
Peter, boastful, self-centered, ambitious, and
inventive, convinces Manuela (Cady Huffman), Elbowville's sexed-up blonde mayor (accompanied
by Kolbein [Patrick Boll], her yes man), who wants to secure her legacy, to
sponsor his Prosperity Machine, which produces Lobster Promissory Notes. “Oh.
My. Bob. Oh, my Bob!” enthuses Manuela, who foresees “the age of affluence in
Elbowville.” This machine, and its ability to produce promissory notes that can
be loaned at will (all you need to do is sign a contract), creates a financial
bubble that eventually is exploded when a credit rating company agent blows the
scheme sky high as he sings:
Easy money
Is a dangerous thing.
It leads to bingeing
and investing in some hare-brained
Schemes.
Everyone, including Peter's brother, Stein, and his wife, Asrun (Kate Shindle), go through an experience not unlike that of Gunnar's family in SAGA. This is Mr. Jonsson’s reductionist method of
dramatizing Iceland’s financial panic and, despite the price that Peter eventually
pays, the effect is trivialization, a fate SAGA managed to avoid. REVOLUTION goes off in other directions as
well, but they only weigh the show down.
From left: Karli Dinardo, Zach Cossman, Rick Faugno (center), Danielle Kelsey. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Director Bergur Ingolfsson’s lively production often has
actors entering by rushing down the aisles (keep your feet inside if you're sitting there), and even includes some brief moments
of interplay with spectators in the front rows. A five-member band (the
Revolutionary Cellular Orchestra), situated upstage left, is led by Matt Basile
and includes percussion, guitars, synthesizer, and piano. Mr. Jonsson’s
derivative-sounding indie-rock music makes very little impact, and too many of
the numbers are of the big-voiced, shouting variety. There’s little positive to
say about the lyrics either, like those quoted earlier, or these, in a song the
brothers sing when making an oath of mutual loyalty.
Our bond will never
ever be torn.
We are brothers,
until the day we die.
Let’s make an oath.
Let’s make an oath.
Let’s make an oath.
And more of the same, including another dozen iterations
of “Let’s make an oath” and ending with “Whoah. We are brothers first, until we
die. This is our oath.” Song after song remains on this level of triteness. Iceland’s
biggest musical hit was MARY POPPINS so maybe they’re not ready for Sondheim
yet.
Lee Proud, a British choreographer, is responsible
for the various dance sequences, most of which are standard issue Broadway-style
routines, but there’s a standout tap dance number. It makes an odd fit in this
world, but it has a certain offbeat charm and is well executed.
Kate Shindle (left), Cady Huffman. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
The dialogue is as banal as the lyrics and, sometimes,
painfully unfunny. Oscar Wilde has nothing to fear from remarks like Brynja’s,
when asked where her pet cold virus is: “He’s at home. He has a bad cold.
There’s snot everywhere. It’s a total mess,” to which Alex responds: “Well, I
guess that goes with the territory. Just be careful not to be too sterile. They
can easily die if they catch cleanliness.” Biological notions constitute most
of what passes for humor, including a piece of art Manuela describes as “my
uterus,” which she had bronzed after having a hysterectomy. In Mr. Jonsson’s
universe hysterectomies are hysterical.
Most of the performers display strong voices and
several, like Mr. Smith, are also skilled dancers. None, however, is able to
overcome the cartoon exaggerations of their characters and bring them to life
in an interesting way. The Tony-winning Ms. Huffman (THE PRODUCERS) acts and sings with her usual electric vivacity, but her
Cruella Deville-like Manuela is a cliché and there’s not much she can do with
it. It would be nice one day to see her in a role that didn’t focus on her as
a voluptuous sex object. And also in one that doesn’t require her to say things
like, “Do you find my uterus sexy?” Kate Shindle as Asrun also
sings impressively, but she, too, has to play a character with very little
character.
Cady Huffman. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
REVOLUTION’s production design looks more expensive
than the average Off-Broadway show’s. Still, Peter Hlousek’s scenic design is
the increasingly familiar one of a bare stage backed by a brick wall with bi-level
scaffolding and stairs at either side. Mr. Hlousek is also responsible for the extensive and sometimes very
sophisticated use of video and still projections, which are often memorable. Kudos go as well to lighting designers Jeff Croiter and Cory
Pattak for their creation of a rather complex lighting
system in the rock musical mode, including multiple criss-crossing
beams of smoky light. A lot of attention has been paid to the costumes,
by Hrafnhildur Anardottir and Edda Gudmundsdottir; the clothes, by and large,
are in combinations of black and red, with heightened futuristic touches,
mainly on the female characters, where black leather is much in evidence. Ms.
Huffman’s final getup is more bizarre than attractive, which could also be said
of Mr. Nacht’s jacket with its inflated shoulders (his character, we learn, can’t afford
real shoulder implants).
What REVOLUTION IN THE ELBOW OF RAGNAR AGNARSSON
needs is divine help from Bob Redford. We should all join Alex, Peter, and
Stein when they pray to him: “Oh dear Bob of Hollywood, protect us! Oh thou
Great Gatsby and Horse Whisperer in the sky. . . . I will be your Candidate
even if I’m just Ordinary People. Let a River Run Through It.” I suspect, however, that Bob, if he were listening, might respectfully respond, "ALL IS LOST."