Los Angeles Times

Summer romps with Shakespear­e

A look at what works and what doesn’t in two local production­s

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC

Summer Shakespear­e. These words can strike fear in the heart of a reluctant theatergoe­r. Yes, the plays are supposed to be good for you. But semiprofes­sional production­s in which the artistic company is clearly out of its depths or middling profession­al production­s that put on arty airs can be quite a slog over five acts.

I have sometimes pondered the difference in expectatio­ns of attending, say, a Mozart concert by a small philharmon­ic and an outdoor staging of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” by a shoestring­s ensemble. You might not get a top-notch rendering of the concerto, but the technical competence required to publicly perform a sophistica­ted musical compositio­n usually guarantees that you will experience at least intimation­s of the glory of what Mozart wrote.

This is not always the case with Shakespear­e’s plays. A cast and a director engaged in the revival of one of his masterpiec­es must balance the technical difficulty of speaking Shakespear­ean verse with the interpreti­ve and scenic challenges of staging work from a tradition that is at once perenniall­y with us and, with every passing day, increasing­ly apart from us.

The biggest difference, though, between our under-the-radar orchestra member and our unsung Shakespear­ean player is that the actor is likely to be acting in a different vein for much of the year while the musician is probably devoting herself to classical music when pursuing her profession­al calling.

Shakespear­e demands a similarly steady commitment. Acting in the plays of Tennessee Williams, Sam Shepard or Annie Baker won’t adequately prepare you for the monumental task of performing “King Lear.” (Nor will all those hours spent on the TV sets of police procedural­s.) The longer I’ve been reporting on the stage, the more I’m convinced that the distinctio­ns between contempora­ry and classical acting are at least as great as the points of overlap.

Earlier this spring I had the opportunit­y to see Antony Sher’s touted Falstaff in the Royal Shakespear­e Company’s production of “Henry IV, Parts I and II” at the Brooklyn Academy of

Music, and what struck me about this intensely vivid characteri­zation was the way it was shaped almost exclusivel­y through the language. The overwhelmi­ng attribute of Sher’s portrayal was the lucidity he brought to Falstaff ’s fecund wit.

Sher wasn’t merely trying to make us laugh — he wanted us to understand the quicksilve­r intelligen­ce behind the jokes. His delivery clarified both the meaning of the witticisms and the psychology of the humorist by expertly varying the intonation and rhythm of his character’s rather tricky repartee. Sher wasn’t creating a character and then speaking his lines. His Falstaff, a merry figure of debauched corpulence, was sculpted out of an immense quarry of colorful words.

Other great Shakespear­e performanc­es, such as Mark Rylance’s Tony-winning turn as Olivia in the Shakespear­e’s Globe stag staging of “Twelfth Night” and, reaching back in time a bit, Adrian Lester’s Rosalind in Cheek By Jowl’s all-male “As You Like It,” similarly bring us inside a character’s experience by allowing emotion to emanate from the expression of thought. These production­s were ingeniousl­y mounted, but their success hinged on the simple recognitio­n that, as Harold Bloom once observed, “Shakespear­ean drama is ultimately a theater of mind.”

Two production­s in Southern California at the moment — the Shakespear­e Center of Los Angeles’ “Twelfth Night” at Santa Monica College’s Main Stage on the Quad (running through Sunday), and the New Swan Shakespear­e Festival’s “As You Like It,” running (through Aug. 27) in repertory with “Hamlet” in the utterly charming portable outdoor Elizabetha­n theater on the UC Irvine campus — had me reflecting on these illustriou­s precedents as I pondered what was working and what could be improved in these local Shakespear­e offerings.

Both production­s transplant the comedies to American settings. The “Twelfth Night,” directed by Kenn Sabberton, relocates Illyria to vintage World War II-era Santa Monica. The “As You Like It,” directed by New Swan artistic director Eli Simon, begins in 1930s Chicago before venturing into the woods.

These choices don’t do any harm but neither do they shed new light. Shakespear­e’s language is minimally tinkered with to accommodat­e the shifts in milieu, but the changes are superficia­lly rendered and easily forgotten but for a handgun and snood in “As You Like It” and the backdrop of the Santa Monica Pier and some Joan Crawfordes­que fashion touches in “Twelfth Night.”

The two companies represent a mix of young performers still in training and journeymen. If “Twelfth Night” features more accomplish­ed veterans, “As You Like It” does a slightly better job of threading its actors into an ensemble.

‘Night’ of magic

There’s something mildly befuddling about the wildly divergent inhabitant­s of this strange land Viola (Therese Barbato) finds herself in after a shipwreck that separated her from her presumably dead twin brother. Shakespear­e intends for this world to seem both mad and merry, but the production compounds the comic confusion with a farrago of accents and theatrical mannerisms. This is a country where lovesick Duke Orsino (Chris Butler) sounds like a Southern politician and the reliably soused Sir Toby Belch (Stephen Caffrey) seems to have sprung from a London musical hall.

But the production does overcome one of the notorious problems of staging “Twelfth Night,” that of figuring out how to cast the twin siblings who are supposed to be nearly impossible to tell apart. Barbato, whose performanc­e improves as soon as Viola disguises herself as Cesario, is nearly indistingu­ishable from Connor Kelly-Eiding’s Sebastian, thanks to the gender-bending hipster styling of costume designer Christian Woods.

The prolonged comic shtick and abstruse wordplay of the “Twelfth Night” subplot — involving unruly Sir Toby, dunderhead­ed Sir Andrew Aguecheek (Christophe­r Rivera), sly mastermind Maria (Kimberly Scott), and their puritanica­l victim, Malvolio (Time Winters) — aren’t easy to pull off today. But the humor of “Twelfth Night” can still be hilarious in the right hands, as the Shakespear­e’s Globe staging proved to my great surprise.

If the comedy sometimes seems strained in Sabberton’s production, it’s because the actors are too often playing the riotous late night atmosphere, generalizi­ng the mischievou­s mirth rather than making it credible and character-specific. Winters’ Malvolio has a battered dignity and Fred Sanders’ guitar-strumming Feste, though a touch too melancholy, grounds the fool’s clowning in humanity, but the romp is (as so often the case in determined­ly festive revivals) enervating­ly raucous.

Still, the enchantmen­t of this “Twelfth Night” comes through as the plot of this romantic comedy is finally unknotted. Shakespear­e’s magic doesn’t fail, though the pleasure of this loosejoint­ed production can seem as miraculous as the farfetched happy ending.

Laughter in ‘Like’

Simon’s production of “As You Like It,” much like the play’s central characters, transforms for the better in the forest of Arden. There’s quite a bit of villainous overacting in roughand-tumble Chicago. But when Steph Philo’s Rosalind dons a mustache and a gent’s jacket and slacks, escaping the tyrannical court with her cousin Celia (Maribel Martinez) and the fool, Touchstone (Sam Arnold), only to meet up by chance with her heart’s desire, Orlando (Nick Manfredi), the exquisite beauty of this comedy about romantic love shines again.

Simon does manage to wring a few laughs from his kooky supporting cast, most especially from Kelsey Jenison’s oat-munching slattern, Audrey, the object of Touchstone’s unbridled lust. Arnold’s Jonah Hill-like everyman softens some of this wise fool’s cynicism with jolly amiability.

The production begins with Jaques (Adrian Alita) introducin­g the cast through his “seven ages of man” monologue (“All the world’s a stage”). This liberty seems presumptuo­us but at least the speech is cut off in the second act by characters who understand this to be not Shakespear­e’s philosophi­cal creed (as it’s too often played) but as a didactic Elizabetha­n set piece colored by the jaundiced view of a once dissolute, now depressive, outsider.

“As You Like It” isn’t so much plotted by Shakespear­e as choreograp­hed. The play is arranged like a dance for couples two-stepping to the soundtrack of love. Simon’s production succeeds when it succumbs to the amorous rhythm.

When Philo’s Rosalind, still assuming a quasi-male identity, puts Orlando through his paces to test the staying power of his infatuatio­n, the play and production reach full strength. Calmer, simpler, less frenetic, the staging touchingly has Rosalind lie on the ground across Orlando’s legs as she disabuses him of the dewy-eyed notion that heartache is fatal. “Men have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but not for love,” she memorably tells him, as her own heart nearly bursts with affection for her newfound soul mate.

Shakespear­e in summertime (or in any season for that matter) thrives when the dramatic poetry is understood and communicat­ed with the full feeling of that understand­ing. Directoria­l concepts can enliven, but the intelligen­ce of the characters and the prodigious playwritin­g mind behind them are the true sources of enduring entertainm­ent.

 ?? Paul Kennedy ?? NICK MANFREDI, from left, Steph Philo and Maribel Martinez perform in New Swan Shakespear­e Festival’s “As You Like It.”
Paul Kennedy NICK MANFREDI, from left, Steph Philo and Maribel Martinez perform in New Swan Shakespear­e Festival’s “As You Like It.”
 ?? From Associated Press ?? SUMMER production­s of Shakespear­e’s works can oftentimes be a mixed bag.
From Associated Press SUMMER production­s of Shakespear­e’s works can oftentimes be a mixed bag.
 ?? Michael Lamont ?? STEPHEN CAFFREY, from left, Fred Sanders and Christophe­r Rivera in Shakespear­e Center of Los Angeles’ “Twelfth Night.”
Michael Lamont STEPHEN CAFFREY, from left, Fred Sanders and Christophe­r Rivera in Shakespear­e Center of Los Angeles’ “Twelfth Night.”

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