Date: Fri 14-May-1999
Date: Fri 14-May-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SARAH
Quick Words:
Clearing-Hartford-Stage-April
Full Text:
THEATRE REVIEW: A Powerful, Timeless "Clearing" In Hartford
(with cut)
By June April
HARTFORD -- Comparable to Arthur Miller's classic play The Crucible , Hartford
Stages' current production, The Clearing , is also a powerful and timeless
production. Written by the British playwright Helen Edmundson, the insightful
and profound story heralds a new force in the pantheon of fine playwrights.
When it was first performed six years ago in London, The Clearing won the Time
Out Theatre Award and shared a John Whiting Award as well.
The basic story tells of the effect of Oliver Cromwell's reign on the Irish
people in the 17th Century. It reads like Hitler's persecution policies or the
ethnic cleansing going on today. But it also explores the meaning of love,
loyalty and respect between friends and spouses.
The power of women is strongly stated in this production. Ms Edmundson's
sensitivity to struggle and empathy with justice is inherent in her writing.
Director Tracy Brigden has also grasped the poetic power in this play, and
brings to audiences a deeply visceral experience that leaves people intensely
impacted. This is theatre at its best; it is theatre making a mark on one's
life.
The set is primarily trees, with a "cut-out" house that is raised or lowered
depending on whether an interior or exterior scene. Minimal props are
effective, leaving no doubt the locale of the setting. Jeff Cowie's talents as
a scenic designer reflect his Rhode Island School of Design training.
The period costumes designed by Susan Hilferty are worthy of awards, both in
construction and accuracy. They were heightened by the effective lighting
skills of Howell Binkley.
As the English Lord Robert Preston, Stevie Ray Dallimore intensely absorbs the
angst and rationalizations of his character's quandary. Where should his
loyalties go? To his wife, or to his own preservation by disassociating with
the so-called traitors, once close friends? (Are there echoes strongly heard
here from the horrors of the McCarthy era?)
There is a line spoken in the beginning of Act IV by Sir Charles Sturman,
Cromwell's representative in Ireland, in which Sturman says of the Irish:
"...Why do we not bury them in pits so deep they will be forgotten?..." It
rings a too painfully resonant bell for Africa, Yugoslavia, Asia, our own
Southern history and more...
Brilliantly credible portrayals were handed in by every actor. Alyssa
Bresnahan is marvelous as Preston's fiery Irish wife Madeleine. Though she is
devoted to their son and the lifestyle of the wife of an English Lord, her
Irish roots and her sense of justice and loyalty are untarnished.
Joseph Costa and Sandra Shipley played close friends and neighbors of the
Prestons. An older couple, they seek the legal avenues to preserve their life
and land.
Simon Brooking, whose role as Pierce Kinsellagh symbolizes the Irish rebels
and their determination in the face of overwhelming odds to hold onto their
homeland, is also wonderful. Innocent victims abound, as in all crises.
Patricia Dunnock's part as Killaine Farrell, Madeleine's dearest friend,
heightens the impact on choices one makes in the face of danger.
Representing the English power in the personage of Sir Charles Sturman, the
actor Sam Catlin masterfully plays cat-and-mouse games with the Irish, casting
hope where there is none, and tearing people's lives apart with one stroke of
his quill pen. His emotional range is riveting and he is essential in spinning
the web that ensnares.
Multiple smaller roles are played by Steve Juergens, with varying accents and
manners. Mr Juergens knows how to use body and voice to create very different
characters.
The Clearing plays at the Hartford Stage until May 16. It is some of the very
finest theatre this reviewer has seen there, and one of the very best of any
theatre seen this season. For tickets and further information, call
860/527-5151.