ceebeegee: (Default)
Ha! I finally figured out how to use that userpic factory so as to make an icon of my beloved home state. Take THAT, Technology!

Michael and I saw Eccentricities of a Nightingale on Monday night. It's a (heavily) revised version of my favorite Tennessee Williams play, Summer and Smoke, about the somewhat eccentric daughter of an Episcopal priest in Glorious Hill, Mississippi around 1916. Alma is such a lovely, delicate creature, with Blanche's romanticism and love for the half-light but without her annoying qualities :) (Blanche gets on my nerves sometimes.) She has a line in the original, a quotation of Oscar Wilde's: "We are all of us lying in the gutter, but some of us are looking up at the stars." She's such a pure idealist, her yearning so strong--I love how she refuses to indulge John's summer of dissolution. John is the doctor's son (and newly minted doctor himself) who lives next door--she has been in love with him since she was a child.

In the original, the action starts in the summer and mostly takes place there. Johnny has just graduated from Johns Hopkins with honors but has no interest in applying himself; he only wants to gamble, drink, hang out. He and Alma have some pretty strongly worded discussions about the soul versus the physical and he makes a clumsy pass at her on the one date they attempt. Later in the fall, she tells him she's changed her mind ("Last summer I was suffocating in smoke, from somethin' on fire inside me...") and he says even if she'd let him before, he wouldn't have been able to--he wouldn't have felt worthy. She has a beautiful line, something about "so you've come around to my way of thinking, just as I have to yours, two people exchanging a call on each other at the same time, and each one finding the other one gone out, the door locked against him, and no one to answer the bell." Oh, it breaks my heart. He ends up engaged to one of her voice students, and she? As Johnny says to her teasingly earlier in the play "Miss Alma is lonely..." and the last we see of her, she is picking up a traveling salesman and about to hit the redlight district with all her brittle charm on display.

Eccentricities of a Nightingale changes the stories and characters considerably--Johnny in particular is much less interesting. He's much more of a mama's boy--they have this weird more-than-faintly Oedipal relationship that diminishes him quite a bit. Alma is muuuuuch more eccentric (some of it was the actor), not an improvement. She's so weird that frankly you wonder what he sees in her!--she needs to have some sweetness to attract him, and us. She's much less vulnerable. Alma's mother's cruelty has been transferred to her father. And most of the action takes place during the Christmas/New Year's season, instead of in the summer. This means one of my favorite exchanges is lost--when Alma has retreated into the rectory after the summer's failure and her father asks plaintively "what am I to say to people who ask about you?" and she replies "tell them I've changed and you're waiting to see in what way."
ceebeegee: (Helen of Troy)
Michael and I saw Cat on a Hot Tin Roof last night. For the most part I thought it was pretty good, although not transcendently good (so no standing O from me). Anika Noni Rose did a great job as Maggie--not really the way I would've played it (I thought she missed a lot of the musicality of the role) but she did interesting things with it. Terence Howard was good in the intense scenes--his monologue about Skipper was quite good--but he was a little too subdued in the other stuff. He just looked drunk, not motivatedly drunk (IOW, I didn't see why he was drunk, I didn't see the torment within, even a hint). Was quite impressed with Phylicia Rashad, who I thought was wrong for Big Mama. She didn't seem the type but she came through--amazingly vulnerability from her. Great face, it registered a lot. I'm sorry to say, I was disappointed in James Earl Jones. I thought he missed a LOT in his monologues--seemed to rush through them instead of experiencing them, and I found it difficult to understand him sometimes. His cry in the third act, when Gooper says "sounds like the pain has hit" should be like a dying animal, a bellow, much bigger and more primal than it was. And when he realizes the truth at the end of Act II he should be MUCH more affected than JEJ played it--he has been betrayed, they're all "LIARS!" It seemed very casual.

Giancarlo Esposito as Brother Man was great, as was his Sister Woman. Their kids were cute and appropriately annoying except for the one who has the scene with Maggie--horrible, annoying child actor who played her scene like Dee from "what's Happening!!," ridiculously sarcastic and snotty. She also lounged on the couch during the curtain call--her father is Terence Howard so I doubt she's going to get called on it.

The set, transparent scrims for the walls, was neat except for the badly painted moon and the lame-o fireworks. And I liked the much-criticized "spotlight on monologues" thing that Allen had going, except for one fade-in that happened too quickly. However they didn't use the Elia Kazan ending (the one where Brick makes it clear to Gooper and Mae that he's backing Maggie's story)--they used the earlier one that Tennessee Williams wrote, that ends with Maggie turning out the lights and saying "you weak, beautiful people who give up! What you need is someone to take hold of you, gently, with love!...I do love you, Brick, I do!" Brick: "Wouldn't it be funny if that were true?" The writing of that last exchange is lovely of course, but I prefer the other ending, where Mae is screeching at Maggie, saying "we know you're not pregnant, we hear the nightly pleading and the nightly refusal." And Brick says "Sister Woman, how do you know we don't come to some kind of temporary arrangement?...Oh, I know some people are huffers and puffers, but others are silent lovers." Mae says in amazement "I cannot believe you are stooping to her level, I simply cannot believe you are stooping to her level." And Bricks says to Maggie "What is your level? Tell me so I can sink or rise to it." That's beautiful writing too, and it shows Brick has had a transformation--something has happened, something has changed. The other ending is awfully defeatist.

The audience was interesting--they laughed at everything. It was very unsettling--yes, Cat is nominally a comedy but it's really more of a Chekovian comedy, not a yukfest. It seemed as though the actors started playing to get laughs as well (at least some of them--JEJ and Terence Howard, certainly) which definitely undercut some of the power of these moments. For example, TH delivered the Skipper monologue, JEJ's next line was something like "are you done?" and he said it very quickly, as though it were a comic line. Of course it got a huge laugh, which completely undermined the power of TH's monologue.

I wish they'd tinted Terence Howard's hair a little redder (like Malcolm X's)--Brick got his nickname from his hair and they cut that reference in the script so the name made no sense.

The four (white) people who sat behind us were apparently annoyed that "the whole play is in Ebonics" (according to Michael). This amused and infuriated me by turns--no, it wasn't in "Ebonics," the entire script was pretty faithful to Tennessee Williams and nothing was rewritten, as far as I can tell (and I know that play very well). If you're referring to the "blaccent," well, the whole cast is black, what did you expect? They sounded great. Morons. The four of them left after the second act.

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