Los Angeles Times

‘Chaillot’ a superb revival

Director Stephanie Shroyer nimbly guides a production that is timelier than ever.

- By Philip Brandes calendar@latimes.com

After a vast oil field is discovered beneath a beloved city, why should tycoons let an inconvenie­nt truth like environmen­tal devastatio­n stand between them and their profits? Jean Giraudoux’s “The Madwoman of Chaillot” posed that prescient question in 1943, and a superb revival at A Noise Within in Pasadena extracts every drop of contempora­ry relevance from the play’s satirical black gold.

A work that defies easy labels, “The Madwoman of Chaillot” delivers insightful social criticism with sharpeyed realism, then veers abruptly into a whimsical utopian fantasy. L.A. veteran stage director Stephanie Shroyer proves an ideal choice to steer A Noise Within’s ensemble through the play’s mash-up of classical and modernist elements.

The central theme of unfettered greed is set in the opening scene, as a self-serving president (Wesley Mann) promotes stock market investment­s as the triumph of a creative artist: “What we sell is not a share in a business but a view of the Elysian Fields.”

Bernie Madoff couldn’t have said it better.

A shifty prospector, played with gleeful disdain for moral constraint­s by Armin Shimerman (perhaps best known for “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine”), soon convinces the president and his crony plutocrats that there’s oil to be plundered from underneath Paris — and the riches to be made from it far outweigh the well-being of a lowly populace.

The salvation of the city rests with the title character, Countess Aurelia (Deborah Strang), whose “madness” lies in her refusal to embrace the ethical decay of her privileged peers. Strang’s tour de force performanc­e evokes imperious eccentrici­ty.

With the aid of some dotty like-minded matrons (Jill Hill, Susan Angelo, Veralyn Jones), a canny junk dealer (George Villas), and downtrodde­n townsfolk, the countess turns the tables on the greedy 1-percenters and their enablers, finding time along the way to play matchmaker to a would-be suicide (Rafael Goldstein) and a maiden (Leslie Lank). Or, as the countess puts it, “Nothing is ever so wrong in this world that a sensible woman can’t set it right in the course of an afternoon.”

The imaginativ­ely staged and choreograp­hed resolution may be only a wish fulfillmen­t fantasy, but it shows why this classic fable resonates most vividly in times of beleaguere­d idealism.

 ?? Craig Schwartz ?? DEBORAH STRANG has the title role in “The Madwoman of Chaillot,” whose “madness” is in her refusal to embrace the ethical decay of her privileged peers, and the actress delivers a tour de force performanc­e.
Craig Schwartz DEBORAH STRANG has the title role in “The Madwoman of Chaillot,” whose “madness” is in her refusal to embrace the ethical decay of her privileged peers, and the actress delivers a tour de force performanc­e.

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