Date: Fri 10-Jul-1998
Date: Fri 10-Jul-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Ionesco-Yale-Cabaret-April
Full Text:
(rev "Two By Ionesco" @Yale Summer Cabaret)
Theatre Review--
Absurd Theatre Translates Into A Few Laughs At Summer Cabaret
By June April
NEW HAVEN -- There's a wonderfully applicable quote from Hamlet that
succinctly sums up Two by Ionesco : "Brevity is the soul of wit."
The first of the two short offerings currently playing at Yale's Summer
Cabaret is entitled Foursome , and it was a delicious taste of Theatre of the
Absurd.
The sense of the action was strongly reminiscent of a Liechtenstein (Op Art)
work, with echoing images of the French Surrealist Rene Magritte. The
comic-strip nature of the piece was very effectively brought home by the
staging.
The three male actors -- Dupont, portrayed by John Lenartz; Brennan Brown as
Durand; and Graham Stevens as Martin -- had superb timing and choreographed
action for this little gem. Alicia Roper, as The Pretty Lady, was more
effective in this play than in The Bald Soprano where her voice was at times
shrill to the point of annoyance.
Although Absurdism focuses on the futility of all action, and the
pointlessness of all direction, the Rumanian born Eugene Ionesco leaned
strongly to fatalism, and his characters face their foreordained paths,
stoicly or rebelliously.
Watching The Bald Soprano one was inclined to wonder (as the mind wandered),
if the story or its telling has lost something in the translation from the
original French. First presented in 1950, the title was born through error.
According to some notes in the program, during a rehearsal one of the actors
forgot lines in one of the nonsense soliloquies and extemporaneously
substituted "the bald soprano." Ionesco liked what he heard and changed the
play's title from English Made Easy to The Bald Soprano. That's theatre being
absurd.
In both of the plays, John Lenartz stands out in terms of his
characterizations and clarity of speech. With television and off-Broadway
experiences behind her, Claudia Arenas shows particular promise as an actor.
It will be interesting to observe how her training from the Yale Drama School
will shape her potential.
For ticket information about all Summer Cabaret productions call 432-1567.
Single tickets range from $12-$16. The theatre is at 217 Park Street in New
Haven.