Windsor Star

The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our reality stars

A Trump-like Caesar assassinat­ed in New York City stage production

- VERENA DOBNIK

He looks like Donald Trump, with his fluffy hair, dark suit and tie hanging below the belt. He moves like Trump. He even has a wife with a Slavic accent. And at the start of the third act, the actor playing Julius Caesar in New York City’s free summer Shakespear­e in the Park festival is knifed to death on stage, blood staining his white shirt.

The decision to inject a Trump look-alike into the leading role in Julius Caesar is a provocativ­e one, given both the famous assassinat­ion scene and a nude scene in the show.

Performanc­es at Central Park’s Delacorte Theater began in late May, just days before comedian Kathy Griffin was widely condemned for posing for a photograph in which she gripped a bloodied rendering of Trump’s head.

Oskar Eustis, the Public Theater’s artistic director who also directed the play, said in a statement that “anyone seeing our production of Julius Caesar will realize it in no way advocates violence toward anyone.”

Shakespear­e’s play, and the New York production, he said, “make the opposite point: Those who attempt to defend democracy by undemocrat­ic methods pay a terrible price and destroy their Republic. For over 400 years, Shakespear­e’s play has told this story and we are proud to be telling it again in Central Park.”

Julius Caesar tells a fictionali­zed story of a powerful, popular Roman leader who is assassinat­ed by senators who fear he is becoming a tyrant. It is set in ancient Rome, but many production­s have costumed the characters in modern dress to give it a present-day connection.

People lining up to get tickets to the show this week said they weren’t bothered by any similariti­es of the centuries-old play to the Trump presidency.

“Not at all,” said George Pliakas, 39, a Manhattan orthodonti­st. “I think it’s interestin­g, the analogies between ancient Roman politics and the politics of the United States now ... You want presentday interpreta­tions infused into theatre, even if it’s from 2,000 years ago.”

Some patrons, who begin lining up at dawn for a ticket to the 8 p.m. performanc­e, seemed to enjoy taking verbal stabs at the 45th president.

Brutus, one of the play’s conspirato­rial Roman senators, calls Julius Caesar an ambitious man.

“But I don’t think he’s in the same category as Trump,” said Martin Margulis, a retired psychologi­st from Portland, Maine, waiting for his ticket. “I think Trump would love to be compared to Julius Caesar, who was a great warrior; Trump is a very, very disturbed individual, very immature, and his sole philosophy is winning at all costs.”

The Public Theater warns spectators: “Please note: Julius Caesar contains the use of violence, nudity, live gunshot sounds, strobe, herbal cigarettes, haze, and fog.”

That includes Caesar, played by Gregg Henry, stepping naked from a bathtub.

In an online message on the Public Theater website, Eustis says Shakespear­e’s work “is about how fragile democracy is. The institutio­ns that we have grown up with ... can be swept away in no time at all.”

The production runs through June 18.

 ?? VERENA DOBNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? “Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he,” reads a sign promoting The Public Theater’s production of Julius Caesar in New York’s Central Park.
VERENA DOBNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he,” reads a sign promoting The Public Theater’s production of Julius Caesar in New York’s Central Park.

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