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- <text id=90TT1938>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: Rancho-On-Avon
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 79
- Rancho-on-Avon
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By William A. Henry III
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>THE TAMING OF THE SHREW</l>
- <l>by William Shakespeare</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Timeless and all embracing as Shakespeare seems, he
- sometimes shows himself to be, unmistakably and unattractively,
- a man of his times. The Merchant of Venice is so bluntly
- anti-Semitic that most modern directors infuse their staging
- with irony, distorting the play into a covert dissent against
- bigotry. Just as problematic is The Taming of the Shrew, which
- treats women as economic or sexual prizes and delights in
- detailing how one husband breaks his wife's spirit through
- starvation, humiliation, irrationality and hints of violence.
- Most contemporary renditions warp the play into a feminist
- satire.
- </p>
- <p> Admirably, the star-studded version that opened in New York
- City's Central Park last week solves the problem in a subtler
- way: by transposing the action to the Wild West of frontier
- days. The "Padua" of swinging-door saloons and semicorrupt
- sheriffs is recognizably not of our era, yet equally
- recognizably a precursor to it; thus the outrageous sexual
- politics onstage is not ours, but pertinent to it. Director A.J.
- Antoon has taken considerable liberties (one character is
- called Joe Bob), and he uses the setting as much for slapstick
- buffoonery as for literary insight. But the show, the 14th in
- producer Joseph Papp's cycle of the Shakespeare canon, works
- better than any since the opening A Midsummer Night's Dream,
- also by Antoon, in 1987.
- </p>
- <p> As the spitfire of the title, Tracey Ullman is as funny as
- on her TV series, but misses the pain of a woman who has spent
- her life being upstaged by a beautiful younger sister. Morgan
- Freeman in buckskins looks, and acts, far removed from his role
- as the prim chauffeur in Driving Miss Daisy. He finds both the
- charm and the meanness in his man, speaks beautifully and
- chortles through the obligatory feminist postlude, when Ullman
- ends a speech about happy submission by "accidentally" sending
- him sprawling.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-