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- Winterset
-
-
- (October 7, 1935)
-
- Up from the shadowy dead-end of a Manhattan slum street rises
- a pylon of Brooklyn Bridge, the span sweeping out of sight high
- overhead with a sparse twinkle of lights. Beneath this dark
- serenity Playwright Maxwell Anderson's people in the play,
- Winterset, go furtively about their sinister business. With
- classic disregard for law of probability, almost everyone
- concerned in a 15-year old payroll robbery for which a
- celebrated radical was wrongly executed, come together. There
- is Trock, the consumptive killer who engineered the crime, just
- out of prison for another misdeed. There is the judge (Richard
- Bennett), out of his wits with brooding upon the injustice he
- fears has been done. There is Garth, who saw the robbery
- committed and might have saved the condemned man had he but
- spoken. There is the radical's tough and tortured young son Mio
- (Burgess Meredith), relentlessly set upon clearing his father's
- name.
-
- Playwright Anderson, whose simple maxim is that "somebody must
- write verse plays," has clothed his piece intentionally as well
- as unintentionally in an uneven variety of poetic fabric. Much
- of the common street speech of his criminals and vagrants is
- good stout tow-sacking. Much of the overlong excursion into the
- philosophy of justice, to judge by audience reaction, is
- tiresome shoddy. But pure chamfered silk, most observers agreed,
- were the tender, spontaneous love passages between Mio and
- Miriamne (Margo), Garth's mercurial younger sister, a curious
- and strangely opposite East Side Juliet.
-
-