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- VIEW POINTS, Page 56THEATERA Tale of Downward Mobility
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- Frank Norris' novel McTEAGUE is a panorama of the U.S. at
- the turn of the century: cowboys, gold mines, the immigrant
- experience, the advent of electricity and the movies. At the
- core is a gruesome cautionary tale, aptly retitled Greed by
- Erich Von Stroheim when he made a nine-hour film of it in 1923.
- The book is both bad and great, its prose lopsided and its
- effects crude, its power and pathos undiminished. In adapting
- it anew, California's Berkeley Repertory Theater has retained
- all the virtues and many of the faults. The first half of Neal
- Bell's script seems wayward, slow and sometimes cute, in part
- because director Sharon Ott opts for a too stylized manner of
- acting. The second half is riveting. This is a story of downward
- mobility, about a miner turned dentist (sans diploma) who winds
- up defrocked and doomed in an abandoned mine. In a stunning coup
- de theatre, the multi purpose set ends by dropping chutes,
- heaving dust and becoming the industrial hellhole that he
- struggled, and failed, to escape.
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- By William A. Henry III.
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