Friday, August 27, 2010

All's well that ends well at the Stratford Festival - A Review

Fortunately, I had the opportunity to see a production of Othello last winter at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, which was directed by Marti Marades. I was so impressed in the direction of his intelligence, cohesion, and was happy to see me, from his work in Stratford later in the year more. I was disappointed in All's Well That Ends Well.

Challenges would think that something good or gifts for a Director of Othello, because the game itself has such aserious internal problems that can only be glossed over, never resolved. Moreover, the story of Othello is familiar to many theatergoers, 's good, everything ends well is not known, nor is the plot particularly memorable. With these games can not be a director for granted that the audience understand everything that is not explained clearly.

In important ways, the plot of All's Well That Ends Well only your credulity. As the story begins, Bertram (Jeff Lillico), thethe only son of the widow Countess of Rossillion (Martha Henry), leaving the house is called to join the court of the king of France (Brian Dennehy), who is dying. Between the tears of this separation is effected by Helena (Daniela Vlaskalic), a beautiful young woman who lives by a department of the Countess after the recent death of his father, an eminent physician.

Helena cries because she has fallen madly in love with Bertram - hopelessly, because it has BertramThe interest in it and because their different stations in life have a game in any case impossible. But why should love Bertram?

At first he learns from his mouth Elena (himself) that the attraction is physical, and we are in this view confirmed when shortly after, she is a comic exchange with Bertram's servant Parolles (Juan Chioran) on the merits of started virginity.

But how does the play, Bertram shows cowardly and unmanly.Under pressure the king to marry Helena (who healed the king with a recipe inherited from his father), Bertram insults Helena and then pretends to embrace marriage, making secret plans for escape. Later in the game, they fled to Italy, as a soldier to avoid sleeping with his wife, tried to Diana (Leah Oster) a respectable young virgin of Florence, then seduce, to save his own skin, defames her as a bitch.

As an audience we Bertram hated thoroughly. Stillto know everything, Helen never wavered in his desire for a husband. have failed to live in the house with them as she could see his character? And because its flaws are exposed as a disgrace in the world, as it might still want him?

Elena in constant pursuit of Bertram is inexplicable. Equally hard to believe that everyone seems to play except Bertram is knowing that his friend and follower Parolles sliced a braggart and a coward. Bertram may be a CAD, but hardlyseems to be a madman. Why does it take to convince a clever trick to Parolles Bertram has an unworthy friend?

Marti Marades perfect race but the production of All's well that ends well together, despite the improbability game keeps beautifully. Where the Bard a topic touched on during the game helps us move Marades points. For example, introduce and Parolles Helena themes of virginity and procreation, the game begins, the clown Lavaca (Tom Rooney) developsdoor strangely profound comic speeches, Diana and her circle in a scene of late.

Above all, this is a play about our universal experience of pain, loss and resignation of the Countess highlight Lament:

My heart is heavy, and my life is weak;

The pain would be tears and sorrow bids me speak.

(Act III, Scene 5). It would be easy for a director looking for energy, too weak the story that the waste at the expense of the poetry of the play. Lesshere.

We loved to be funny (and almost cruel) scene in which the blindfolded Parolles as a liar and a deceiver unmasked. But this exhibition presents a series of outstanding achievements. The tireless Ben Carlson (who played an energetic Hamlet on the same day we saw all's well that Ends Well) brought the best of his supporting role as First Lord Dumaine. Fiona Reid, as the widow Capilet and Michelle Fisk, as Mariana, were both delicious.

And, of course, the beautiful andgracious Martha Henry, the veteran Stratford actress, is perfectly cast as the Countess of Rossillion. What gives me more time on this show do not forget, however, is the performance of Tom Rooney as a philosopher Lavaca faceted comedian.

Unfortunately there are no weak performances. More disappointing was that of Helen, as Daniela Vlaskalic. He said his lines in an unnatural, almost sing-song manner not learn from Martha Henry, his voice projectin a big theater, with no expression and meaning. Most vibration performance was that of Leah Oster, who inexplicably gave season All's Well That Ends Well the same midwestern elongated apparently used as Marian the Librarian in The Music Man, which was part of the Stratford Festival 's 2008 and I could not help feeling that Brian Dennehy, as the king of France, saved his energy for something else.

The program makes this productionof All's Well That Ends Well (probably written around 1602) is set in 1889. As usual with the deplorable practice of Shakespeare plays in different time periods, led to this troubling inconsistencies.

I was the historical fact that in 1889, was one hundred years had neglected, as was a king of France. But I have more difficulty with Helena and her "pilgrimage had." After the text of the play (Act III, scene 5), Helena has come to Florence in disguise,claims to be a pilgrim, a holy place. (Her real purpose in Florence, is to follow her husband and obtain her marital rights).

Students of European social history can correct me, but my feeling is that the practice of pilgrimages on foot along to religious shrines have long been extinct until 1889. And if it were a woman wearing a Vlaskalic Helena "pilgrim" disguise in these scenes I do not see it. Again, the "modern" setting served only to confusionProperties.

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