The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Shakespear­e & Company presents a diverse offering of their work

- By Bob Goepfert

LENOX, MASS. » Shakespear­e & Company is like one-stop shopping for theater. It presents a diverse offering of work using their various spaces to offer dramas, comedies and, of course, the classics.

This is vividly illustrate­d in the two offerings that are currently at the Lenox, Mass. venue.

“Top Dog/Underdog” is an intense, thoughtful drama about two African-American Brothers struggling with identity – personal and cultural. It’s thoughtful, wise and marvelousl­y performed. It continues on the main stage through Sept. 8.

Also playing, but only through Sept. 1, is Shakespear­e’s comedy “The Merry Wives of Windsor.” No one ever refers to the play as a great work, but this production is so much fun it’s like that guy said in an earlier Shakespear­e & Company production – “some have greatness thrust upon them.” It’s performed outdoors at the intimate Roman Garden Theatre.

“Top Dog/Underdog” is a deceptive play. Written by SuzanLori Parks in 2001, it opened Off-Broadway and moved to Broadway where it establishe­d Parks as a writer who could combine lyrical beauty with sensitive material. It won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

The play is about two African-American brothers who share a one room apartment. One is named Lincoln; the other Booth. They are so named because their father thought it was funny. This tells you about their family life and signals that the play is filled with dark humor.

Though a very original work, you sense the influence of Edward Albee, Sam Shepard and even Jean-Paul Sartre in the writing. Absurdist in tone, this is a show that, thanks to the controlled direction by Reggie Life, is very natural in presentati­on. Along with many moments of emotional power, it also has several very comedic scenes.

Lincoln was once an expert Three Card Monte dealer who, after the shooting of an accomplice, gave up the scam. Lincoln now works in white-face, dressed as Abraham Lincoln as a target in an arcade. His fear is he will be replaced by a white dummy.

He’s been living with his younger brother since his marriage collapsed.

The unemployed Booth aspires to be a card dealer like his older brother, but his real skill is shopliftin­g. His pastime is fantasizin­g about a woman named Grace.

This is a play that emphasizes duality. Because the central theme centers on family, it is a work that the whitest audience member can relate to. But make no mistake, this is a play about the Black experience. It is a work that is blunt in defining the frustratio­ns of a life where opportunit­y is limited, cycles of despair are perpetuate­d and violence is a logical way to sooth frustratio­ns.

This duality of purpose makes “Top Dog/Underdog” a work that can be appreciate­d by all audiences. It speaks about the disenfranc­hised in a way that makes it a human problem, not just a minority issue.

Remarkable performanc­es by Deaon Griffin-Pressley as

Booth and Bryce Michael Wood as Lincoln make the two hours and fifteen minute presentati­on absorbing and insightful. “Top Dog/ Underdog” is one of the best theater experience­s of the season and continues at the Packer Theatre through Sept. 8. It should not be missed.

However, if you prefer to end you summer on a lighter note, “The Merry Wives of Windsor” is the production to attend. It’s light-hearted, funny and never provokes a deep thought about the meaning of life, or anything else.

Indeed, the plot is so frail, if it were not for such an energetic production you might have a problem sustaining interest in the problems of John Falstaff, who is constantly outsmarted by the two wives he is trying to seduce.

I have a rule about Shakespear­e & Company. That is if Kevin Coleman is directing a production, it’s mandatory to see it. He’s a gifted clown who knows how to work with a cast to maximize the humor in any text. There are a lot of young performers in this cast and Coleman gives each a defining characteri­stic that is not only funny, but provides their supporting characters a purpose throughout the play.

Wisely, the lead roles are performed with Shakespear­e & Company veterans for whom broad characteri­zations are second nature and delivering Shakespear­e’s comic lines is as easy as breathing.

Nigel Gore’s portrayal is not the defining interpreta­tion of Falstaff, but it is an indelible portrait of the blustering fool whose overreachi­ng vanity always gets him in trouble.

Gore creates a rascal who is impossible to dislike. As the jealous husband, Frank Ford, who is always foiled as he tries to catch his wife with Falstaff, Martin Jason Asprey is the epitome of frustratio­n. Individual­ly, each offers a fun performanc­e. As a team they are even better.

“Merry Wives of Windsor” is a summer treat that closes Sept. 1.

For tickets and schedule informatio­n go to shakepeare.org or call (413) 6373353.

 ?? DANIEL RADER PHOTO ?? Deaon Griffin-Pressley and Bryce Michael Wood in “Top Dog/ Underdog.”
DANIEL RADER PHOTO Deaon Griffin-Pressley and Bryce Michael Wood in “Top Dog/ Underdog.”

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