Chicago Sun-Times

‘St. Nicholas’ lacks bite

Even with ‘Downton Abbey’ actor, vampires, production just not that interestin­g

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN For the Sun-Times Catey Sullivan is a local freelance writer.

What separates us from evil? Or, for that matter, separates most of us from sociopaths? Or, if you want to get metaphoric­al (maybe), from vampires? The answer — and it’s a good one — is embedded deep in Conor McPherson’s 1997 drama “St. Nicholas.”

When the unnamed theater critic (Brendan Coyle) in McPherson’s one-man show falls in with a household of vampires, their nightly butchering­s lead him to question the depths of his own depravity. Unlike his charismati­c undead friends, the booze-addled critic isn’t quite so corrupt that he’s unable to reflect on the nature of corruption.

Directed by Simon Evans, Coyle (bestknown for his Job-like sufferings on “Downton Abbey” as the beleaguere­d and endearing valet Mr. Bates) is all-in as the dissolute critic. But despite his creepily compelling work, “St. Nicholas” is essentiall­y the story of a self-indulgent mid-life crisis of a mediocre man. And that is just not terribly interestin­g, even with vampires.

There’s no question as to the critic’s mediocrity. He’s a self-described “hack” who is rich, terrible at his job and at the top of his profession. He revels in petty cruelty and unearned power. He salivates over women young enough to be his daughters. And, as it turns out, he has no problem administer­ing the vampire-world equivalent of Rohypnol to unsuspecti­ng 20-somethings.

When Coyle’s 50-something critic starts detailing his adventures stalking a nubile young actress (who plays the title character in a production of “Salome”), you may well start hoping the vampires descend on him just so he’ll stop waxing icky about the shadows and sinews of her various appendages.

The problem here is tied to empathy. You don’t need to empathize with the leading man to have a great play. Richard III and Titus Andronicus and Hannibal prove that. But McPherson’s critic doesn’t have the intelligen­ce or charm of those characters. His entitlemen­t is common: It’s not kingdoms he feels entitled to; it’s the adoration of young actresses.

Still, there are many bewitching moments in “St. Nicholas.” There are passages about youth and power and the magic of nature that are profound, ideas that merge poetry with philosophy on a plane that seems to waver slightly above this earthly one.

“They have power,” the critic says of vampires. “Not the power to make you do what they want. But real power. To make you want what they want.”

That’s the kind of thought that sets your synapses sparking like an electric eel fending off a predator, in no small part because McPherson surely isn’t really talking about Bram Stoker’s blood-sucking fantasies.

You know the vampires are coming within the first minute of the play’s 90-minute monologue. Brooding on his drunken nights as a critic, Coyle provides a bit of a timeline: “This is back before I met the vampires.”

The road to vampires begins with the aforementi­oned production of “Salome.” As the critic explains, the lead actress sent him plummeting into existentia­l crisis, dragged down by the memory of her lissome appendages. He abandons his family and his job, checking into a London hotel without telling them his whereabout­s. Like Don Draper/Dick Whitman in the final season of “Mad Men” (which came decades after “St. Nicholas”), the critic is a man who can vanish without worrying about money, the fate of his children or the loss of a prestigiou­s, extremely wellpaying job in a hyper-competitiv­e field. It’s a Dick Whitman move that further nudges the audience toward team vampire.

There is still less empathy when the critic starts procuring young people for his vampire friends. We’re told nobody gets hurt or turned into a vampire — the victims just don’t remember anything about what happened to them. And that sometimes they wake up in the vampire house wearing only their underwear. And that they are always quite eager to leave when they do wake up.

As this goes on (for years), the critic gazes ever deeper into his own tortured psyche and “St. Nicholas” becomes all about his self-indulgence. Not even vampires can make that dramatical­ly compelling.

As designed by Peter McKintosh, “St. Nicholas” transforms the Goodman’s Owen Theater into a space of eerie abandonmen­t. The set evokes decayed splendor, sumptuous carpets rotting at the edges and elaboratel­y paned windows papered over with newsprint. Matt Daw’s flickering lights and Christophe­r Shutt’s masterful sound design (are those far-off children screaming or laughing?) create a marvelous ambience.

But “St. Nicholas” isn’t in the same room — or even the same building — with McPherson’s later, supernatur­ally infused works, including 2006’s brilliant “The Seafarer” or 2004’s “Shining City.” The Donmar Warehouse “St. Nicholas” traveled a long way in the service of an uninspired story that, when you get down to it, lacks any real bite.

 ?? HELEN MAYBANKS ?? Brendan Coyle stars in “St. Nicholas” at the Goodman Theatre.
HELEN MAYBANKS Brendan Coyle stars in “St. Nicholas” at the Goodman Theatre.

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