National Post

Lampoon lacks a proper resolution Timon of Athens Tom Patterson Theatre, Stratford

- Robert Cushman

Stratford has f r uitfully twinned its production of The School for Scandal with Timon of Athens, casting mostly the same actors in another lampoon of society — though a far more savage one.

Gossip, though it has its place, is the least of the ills that Shakespear­e, and possibly another, excoriated in Timon. Improviden­ce and ingratitud­e are the principal targets here. Timon is an Athenian noble who spends l avishly and generously, though you couldn’t quite call him a philanthro­pist. Most of his money goes on buttering up the upper crust. He gives his peers presents, redeems them from debtors’ prison, banquets them extravagan­tly and i ncessantly. When he goes broke and tries to call in favours, his friends — or flatterers, as outsiders call them — all find excuses to deny him. Turning 180 degrees, he invites them to a final feast at which he throws water in their faces; he then takes to the woods to live on roots and misanthrop­y.

The peculiarit­y of a play that’s nominally a tragedy is that its protagonis­t has no interior life. In his prosperous days he has not so much as an aside, let alone a soliloquy. Once disillusio­ned he’s all monologue, even when ostensibly talking to other people, but even here he never questions himself; he just pours out invective against whatever humanity happens to cross his path.

The play’s f i rst, satirical half works rollicking­ly, stingingly well. It does in Stephen Ouimette’s new production at the Tom Patterson, just as it did when he staged the same play in the same space 12 years ago. The two versions are not identical, though both are in modern dress: an almost inevitable choice for a play whose money- mad setting so closely resembles our own. Some things, I think, were done better the first time. The dance of Amazons, surprise visitors at Timon’s place, occasioned a wittier exposure of his obsequious guests than the more orgiastic entertainm­ent that’s on offer now.

Similarly, I preferred Ouimette’s more econom- ical staging of Timon’s exile, which had the late Peter Donaldson standing waistdeep throughout in the pit that he now called home. Joseph Ziegler’s Timon roams around a lot more, which is less effective. The great thing about Ziegler’s performanc­e is the wit that he finds in Timon’s later diatribes.

Digging f or roots, the hermit finds gold, which he happily bestows on those who would make the most mischief with it: on thieves, and on rebellious soldiers on their way to lay waste to Athens. He also enjoys telling prospectiv­e refugees from the city that they are welcome to come to a tree near his cave and hang themselves. In his earlier incarnatio­n, Ziegler has the appropriat­e glazed quality for Timon’s thoughtles­s benevolenc­e. As a program note points out, Timon’s progress is that of Ziegler’s definitive Scrooge in reverse. Except that he doesn’t progress; magnificen­t as Timon’s tirades are, they can’t help becoming monotonous, enmeshed as they are in a structure that consists of him being successive­ly visited by all the people he knew in Act One.

They are all well acted here: by Ben Carlson, with his gift for plain speaking, presenting the cynical truthtelle­r Apemantus as a youngish present-day philosophe­r, ostentatio­usly reading a paperback while riot swirls around him; by Michael Spencer- Davis as the faithful steward whose honesty almost softens his former master’s heart; and by Tim Campbell as the disaffecte­d general who brings Athens to its knees and whose scenes benefit here from being dolled up in desert- war fatigues.

The corrupt city itself affords amusingly decadent cameos from Robert King and Rylan Wilkie as Timon’s parasite pals, and from Josue Labourcane and Mike Nadajewski as artists lining up for his patronage. Tyrone Savage has an exciting disgusted outburst as a servant outraged by man’s ingratitud­e. The loyalty of Timon’s staff, even after he’s able to pay them, is the play’s warmest argument in his favour. But it seems that even his author gave up on him. Alone among Shakespear­e’s tragic heroes, he dies offstage, leaving only an unregenera­te epitaph.

Like his life, his play doesn’t end; it stops.

 ?? CYLLA VON TIEDEMANN ?? Joseph Ziegler stars as Timon with Michael Spencer-Davis as Flavius in Timon of Athens.
CYLLA VON TIEDEMANN Joseph Ziegler stars as Timon with Michael Spencer-Davis as Flavius in Timon of Athens.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada