"More Squall thanTempest"
Stars range from 5-1. |
The weather often plays a vital role in one’s
appreciation of the plays produced at the Delacorte Theatre each summer by
Shakespeare in the Park. Thus, in a sense, seeing THE TEMPEST, set as it is on
a tropical island, on the steamiest night of the year couldn’t have been more
appropriate. The gnats thronging in the spotlight beams and the fireflies
flashing against the blue-black night sky vied for attention with the human
activity on the stage. There, a cast led by Sam Waterston as Prospero unfolded
the tale of an angry, aging sorcerer taking his revenge, albeit one tempered by
forgiveness, on those who dared to deprive him of his title as Duke of Milan,
forcing him to live out his days, with his 15-year-old daughter, Miranda
(Francesca Carpanini), as master of the spirits and creatures in a fruitful
island paradise.
Sam Waterston, Francesca Carpanini. Photo: Joan Marcus. |
It’s been some time since Shakespeare in the Park
tackled THE TEMPEST. Lear deBessonet’s colorful musical adaptation of September
2013, given only three performances with a large company made up of largely of
amateur volunteers, was at the Delacorte but wasn’t produced by Shakespeare in
the Park, which hasn’t seen a TEMPEST since Patrick Stewart starred as Prospero
in 1995. The current production, staged by Michael Greif, is more a squall than
a tempest; it tells the story smoothly and efficiently, but only sporadically
captures the magical atmosphere this wondrous play requires.
Unlike most of Shakespeare’s plays, which incorporate
multiple locales, all of THE TEMPEST, except for the titular storm at sea that
begins the action, is set in a single place, the island. But, apart from a bunch of black rocks down right, Riccardo Hernandez’s
functional set has little about it suggesting an island atmosphere. Instead of
earth or sand we get dark wood planking (with traps and a small elevator
platform), and the only hints of an island are the images on upstage panels
showing a raging sea, even after the opening tempest has ended but perhaps implying the tempest in Prospero's soul. Running across
the stage is one of those increasingly common metal gridwork bridges, like the
ones used for rock shows to hang lights on, allowing actors to climb them and
to traverse the space overhead. At extreme stage right is a hut-like enclosure
where percussionist Arthur Solari remains visible as he accompanies the action
with an assortment of excellent musical effects. As usual for Shakespeare in the Park, the lighting (by David Lander) is exceptional.
Mr. Greif's staging is generally uninspired. A significant problem is his failure to come up with ways to gets his actors, especially the ensemble members, off the stage efficiently. Too many scenes end with the actors stranded and having to simply walk off, no longer in character, to one side or into the vomitorium at center while the next scene is beginning.
In essence, this is a straightforward, almost always clear exposition of the play, and those (like my guest, who’d never seen or read the play) being exposed to it for the first time should have no trouble following the story or understanding most of what the actors are saying. Although THE TEMPEST invites imaginative conceptualization, there’s nothing here especially radical.
In essence, this is a straightforward, almost always clear exposition of the play, and those (like my guest, who’d never seen or read the play) being exposed to it for the first time should have no trouble following the story or understanding most of what the actors are saying. Although THE TEMPEST invites imaginative conceptualization, there’s nothing here especially radical.
Sam Waterston, Chris Perfetti. Photo: Joan Marcus. |
Ariel, given a first-rate, if not especially unique,
portrayal by Chris Perfetti as a slender, sylphlike youth with shaved head,
keeps his torso bare except for a leather harness that suggests he’s got a
master-slave domination thing going on. More problematic is Caliban’s look;
despite all the play’s suggestions of his deformities, his fishlike or reptilian
aspects, Louis Cancelmi plays him as merely a bare-chested (except for his own
leather harness), dirty, muscular man with a bad haircut, poor posture, and odd
accent. Both Mr. Perfetti and Mr. Cancelmi offer crisply enunciated portrayals,
making it a shame their appearances couldn’t have been more inventively
conceived.
The production is in two acts running nearly two and three-quarter hours; the first act, apart from its nicely staged tempest, is fairly
boilerplate, but Mr. Greif introduces a number of pretty effects in act
two, as in the masque scene with its use of music and dance. The young lovers,
Miranda and Ferdinand (Rodney Richardson), are spirited, appealing, and vibrant, and those
who play the various courtiers from Milan and Naples are sufficient unto the
need. As the scheming clowns, Stephano and Trinculo, Danny Mastrogiorgio (dressed
like a character from WAITING FOR GODOT) and Jesse Tyler Ferguson (wearing a
jester’s cap), work hard to draw laughs, but they succeed
mainly in showing just how hard their tasks are; even their scene with Caliban
and the “gabardine,” which can be hilarious, isn't as funny as it deserves.
Sam Waterston, perhaps more closely associated with
the Public Theatre and its Shakespeare in the Park productions than any other
living actor, has the stature and experience to embody Prospero, but he
nonetheless succeeds only in demonstrating how close the role is to that of
Charlie Skinner, the gruff but kindly, avuncular news executive he plays on HBO’s
“The Newsroom.” Still trim and spry at 74, he falls short when it comes to
evoking Prospero’s commanding power. And, while there’s no problem following
his words in general, including his fine rendering of the more famous speeches
(like “Our revels now are ended”), his long expository speech to Miranda early
in the play is muffled and muddled by his growly delivery.
Michael Greif’s revival of THE TEMPEST, while only
occasionally satisfying, is nonetheless a suitable introduction to the play.
And there’s still nothing like sitting in Central Park under the New York sky
on a summer’s eve, watching the world’s greatest playwright show his stuff. Company of THE TEMPEST. Photo: Joan Marcus. |
BROADWAY WORLD (review roundup)
THE TEMPEST
Delacorte Theatre/Shakespeare in the Park
Central Park at 81st Street, NYC
Through July 5
THE TEMPEST
Delacorte Theatre/Shakespeare in the Park
Central Park at 81st Street, NYC
Through July 5