Ever since I saw him play the
title role in “More Lies About Jerzy” I have been a confirmed Jack Stehlin
groupie. I’d go to see him in anything. But in the case of John
Farmanesh-Bocca’s new play, “Titus Redux,” that’s a little more arduous
than it might seem.
A two-hour do-over of
Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus,” the play, conceived, choreographed, and
direced by Farmanesh-Bocca, retains the spectacular highlights of
Shakespeare’s most gruesome drama: war, murder, incest, rape,
dismemberment, beheading, and cannibalism. (But at least the blood and
gore remains all over the characters, rather than all over the stage, as
it was in the recent production of Martin McDonagh’s “The Lieutenant of
Inishmore”).
In this production, now having
its world premiere at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, Titus is a heavily medaled
war hero returning from Afghanistan with the ashes of his dead warrior
son. Having been gone for 10 years (shades of Odysseus!), he is returning
to the bosom of his family: his wife Tamora (the Queen of the Goths in
Shakespeare’s version) and his two remaining sons, Chiron and Demetrius,
and his daughter Lavinia. He and they, as one might expect, have differeng
views of war: Titus seeing it as noble and heroic, Tamora declaiming its
futility.
As Titus is plagued by war
flashbacks arrestingly projected on an immense screen, we watch him
disintegrate into madness. We are introduced to Aaron, his wife’s lover (a
Moor in Shakespeare’s version, but played by Farmanesh-Bocca here), and to
Marcus Andronicus, a tribune of Rome and Titus’ brother.
There is a modicum of
Shakespearean language, but more often the players speak in twenty-first
century vernacular as the present replicates the ancient past. In
switching back and forth in time the play is enhanced by its striking
special effects, stirring music, and spectacular choreography. The
company, which features actors from Farmanesh-Bocca’s Not Man
Apart-Physical Theatre Ensemble, move their bodies so expressively that
they could almost present the play without words. In the scene where the
two would-be rapists chase Lavinia, for example, the three players perform
leaps and falls and roll-overs so filled with tension that they make the
actual rape appear almost an afterthought.
There are also extraordinarily
choreographed, almost robotic war scenes, with Titus and two fellow
soldiers moving in tandem to the sound of gunfire. In fact, the overall
mounting of this production is incredibly fine. Among the best I’ve seen.
The cast is uniformly excellent,
including Brenda Strong as Tamora, Margeaux London as Lavinia, Dash Pepin
and Vincent Cardinale as Titus’ sons Demetrius and Chiron, and Nicholas
Hormann as Titus’ brother, Marcus Andronicus.
And then, of course, there’s the
amazing Jack Stehlin, who emotes and throws himself around the stage for
two hours and never breaks a sweat! At the end of the day, I’m still a
fascinated fan and will run to see anything that he and his Circus
Theatricals company choose to produce.
“Titus Redux” will be presented
at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, 9820 Washington Blvd. in Culver City Tuesdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7 through September 12, 2011.
Call 877-369-9112 for tickets. But better hurry---there are only 14
performances scheduled.
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