Los Angeles Times

Self-sacrifice in the selfie era

- By Philip Brandes

Those ancient Greeks knew a thing or two about the precarious balancing act between pursuit of personal fulfillmen­t and responsibi­lity to something greater than one’s own self-interest.

Among the earliest embodiment­s of this dichotomy was the tragic heroine Antigone, who sacrificed herself in the belief that higher principle trumped her own survival. In an imaginativ­e makeover, “Jean Anouilh’s Antigone” at A Noise Within reaffirms the story’s timeless relevance, albeit with cautionary contempora­ry strings attached.

This impeccably staged riff on Sophocles’ classic filters plot and characters through a dual modernist lens: Jean Anouilh’s 1944 allegorica­l retelling, penned in the midst of Nazi-occupied France, has been newly translated and adapted by director Robertson Dean.

Pitting moral conviction against political expediency, the play traces the last day in the life of Antigone (Emily James), daughter of Oedipus and hence no stranger to family dysfunctio­n. True to their bloodline, her brothers have recently killed each other in a battle for control of the state.

Attempting to restore unity after this divisive civil war, the newly installed king, Antigone’s uncle Creon (Eric Curtis Johnson), has arbitraril­y branded one of the brothers a traitor and ordered his corpse left out to rot as an example to wouldbe rebels.

“We’re not a terribly tender family, are we?” he notes, in an understate­ment for the ages.

The brisk clarity in Dean’s staging underscore­s his accessibly updated dialogue throughout. Particular­ly inspired is the personific­ation of the Chorus in Inger Tudor’s narrative recaps and commentary, delivered in ironically breezy direct address that evokes the story’s tragic magnitude even as it debunks the theatrical artifice we’re watching. In a similar vein, Stephen Weingartne­r’s palace guard engages with comic timing that belies the weight of his sinister actions — after all, he’s only following orders.

That level of clarity is sustained in capable performanc­es from the entire cast. Johnson’s standout turn as Creon offers so many levels of nuance and subtle thinking that he often makes the more convincing argument. The questions raised by this morality tale are well-suited to a time when the concept of self-sacrifice has been replaced by the selfie.

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