“Can’t Buy Her Love”
There are
plenty of reasons for why Timon of Athens or, as originally titled, The Life of Tymon of Athens, is infrequently performed, not
least of them being that it’s not entirely by William Shakespeare. Written between 1605
and 1608, it’s the result of a collaboration with Thomas Middleton.
Moreover, this bleak tragedy (with dabs of humor) about excessive generosity, parasitism, selfishness, lack of gratitude, and, ultimately, misanthropy, also has various inconsistencies, including a stylistic disconnect between its first half, gloriously glittering, and its second, dark, dank, and dreary.
Moreover, this bleak tragedy (with dabs of humor) about excessive generosity, parasitism, selfishness, lack of gratitude, and, ultimately, misanthropy, also has various inconsistencies, including a stylistic disconnect between its first half, gloriously glittering, and its second, dark, dank, and dreary.
Kathryn Hunter. Photo: Gerry Goodstein. |
Zachary Fine as the Painter. Photo: Henry Grossman. |
Julian Ogilvie as Jeweller. Photo: Henry Grossman. |
Timon
of Athens—as per
this gender-alternative version—is about how the wealthy Athenian, Lady Timon (Kathryn
Hunter), takes great pleasure in offering feasts to those she knows, as if giving
them expensive gifts, like jewels and horses, and even yanking them from debt
will buy their friendship. Aside from the wittily cynical Apemantus (Arnie
Burton), who castigates Timon for his foolish trust in selfish people, the
others are archetypal freeloaders, caring only for her swag, not her affection.
Got a painting to sell, jewels to peddle, or poetry to purvey? Timon’s your touch.
She has a
true friend only in Flavius (John Rothman), her steward, whose wise advice to
desist she chooses to ignore.
The day
comes, though, when the coffers run dry, she can’t repay a debt, and her fair-weather
friends reject her when she seeks their help. Angry at such betrayals, she
offers a final feast at which she serves the parasites stones and water, converted
by Godwin into bowls of blood so Timon can splash it all over everyone, not
least herself. (They all wear white to emphasize the red.) There’s an unintended
irony in such a distracting choice since it suggests that no matter how poor
you are you can still squeeze blood from stones.
In the second half, Timon is a bitter,
impoverished, Lear-like hermit in rags, living in a cave (here a Beckettian
plain beneath a blasted tree). Abandoning philanthropy for misanthropy, she rails at mankind. While digging for roots to eat, she comes across, of all
things, the root of all evil, a pot of gold. (In Godwin’s staging, the hole from
which she shovels dirt is a rectangle cut into the wooden stage floor, making
it look like she’s digging her own grave. The grave awaiting her, though, is offstage.)
Soon, her
forest retreat is interrupted by Apemantus, whose acrimony Timon now shares, and Alcibiades
(Elia Monte-Brown)—banished by the Senate—and her rebellious followers, aiming
to attack Athens. They carry posters saying things like “Give the Dispossessed
Their Place” and “No Roof, No Comfort,” but automatic rifles are equally at
hand. The prostitutes who normally accompany Alcibiades, and with whom Timon banters
about spreading VD in Athens, have no place in a production with a female Timon
and so are gone with the wind.
To support
Alcibiades’ cause—revised from the original’s political to a social agenda—Timon
donates gold to her, thereafter turning down the offered help of Flavius when
he arrives. Alcibiades brings Athens to its knees and Timon, in staging that transforms
her, oddly, into Christ, dies in a Pieta-like pose as the others gather in tableau.
Why Christ for someone who spreads her wealth not among the poor but among the already
well off? Well, yes, there are the three thieves who renounce their thievery, but
still . . .
Aside from
the unusual casting—which is increasingly less unusual these gender-conscious
days—this is not a particularly engrossing production. The British Hunter
apart, the well-spoken company deliver its words in standard American accents, but
their performances are neither better nor worse than those you’ll find in most front-rank
American productions.
Hunter, as
noted, plays Timon, not by cross-dressing—as with so many female performances
of, let’s say, Hamlet—but as a woman. Regardless of the aptness of this choice,
one might also ponder what makes this particular 63-year-old actress,
diminutive, husky-voiced, and known for her kinetic idiosyncrasies (as per such
roles as Puck, Richard III, and Kafka’s monkey), best for the role. She’s
unquestionably charismatic and perceptive, but hers is a unique physicality that
doesn’t necessarily make her suitable for every part (think Peter Dinklage’s recent
Cyrano). And Godwin, almost as if to emphasize her idiosyncrasy, even has her peeing
in a bucket, wiping herself, and offering the contents to someone else to drink
(which he does!).
Company of Timon of Athens. Photo: Henry Grossman. |
Soutra
Gilmour’s bare-bones set sits on a thrust occupying much of the theatre’s
orchestra and resembling a strip of bark or copper that rides skyward on a
curve where a conventional stage would be. Under Donald Holder’s expert
lighting it takes on a wide variety of beautiful colorations. Gilmour’s stylized
modern costumes use lots of shiny fabric for the banquet, shifting later to palettes
of white and black. A Greek-accented pop vibe marks Michael Bruce’s original
score which, as common in such present-day stagings, gets sung at several
points by a sultry diva (Kristen Misthopoulous) with a handheld mic.
Timon
of Athens has some
wonderful speeches and ideas that continue to have relevance but it remains a mediocre
play. Godwin and Emily Burns’s editorial tinkering, which interpolates some outside
material (with infusions by Godwin and Burns themselves), does little to elevate
it. Even the actors’ frequent direct contact with those seated near the stage,
who risk getting spritzed with seltzer or spotted with blood, seems little more
than gratuitous playing to the crowd.
Were the Bard’s name not attached to it, I doubt that Timon of Athens would be on many people’s wish list.
Were the Bard’s name not attached to it, I doubt that Timon of Athens would be on many people’s wish list.
Polonsky
Shakespeare Center
45
Ashland Place, Brooklyn, NY
Through
February 9