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- <text id=90TT1524>
- <title>
- June 11, 1990: Lord Love A Wild Duck
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 78
- Lord Love a Wild Duck
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A playwright, an actor and a director save the London season
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III
- </p>
- <p> However robust Broadway is, it usually looks anemic compared
- with London. Thanks in part to the government-subsidized Royal
- National Theater and Royal Shakespeare Company, London
- generates three times as many productions as the Great White
- Way--including many more new dramas and a much more varied
- range of revivals--and commonly does them better. In recent
- years British superiority even extended to Broadway's signature
- genre, the musical. As a succession of London hits was packed
- up for export (and runaway profit), Broadway started to seem
- like just an early stop on the international touring circuit.
- </p>
- <p> But things have changed. The Broadway season just past far
- outshone its London counterpart. The writing was better, the
- staging was better, the acting was better. Moreover, American
- writers such as David Henry Hwang, David Mamet and August
- Wilson had far more impact in London than Britons did on the
- Main Stem. And Broadway's musical hits were homegrown, while
- most London musicals of consequence featured American creators,
- recycled American songs, American topics, or all three, and
- were generally mediocre to boot. Fortunately, three British
- stalwarts--a writer, a director and an actor--have mounted
- superb tragicomedies that give the season's tag end a renewed
- hope for dispirited audiences and a belated enticement to
- American tourists.
- </p>
- <p> The playwright, Alan Ayckbourn, 51, is represented in the
- West End by a new play, Man of the Moment, and a stunning
- revival, Absurd Person Singular, and at his regional theater
- in Scarborough by yet another debut, Body Language. All three
- are characteristically bleak and acidulous comedies staged by
- the author himself. The conventional wisdom about Ayckbourn has
- been that he started as a boulevard farceur and turned darker
- in the course of his 39 plays. Yet Absurd, from supposedly
- sunnier days in 1971, shows that acutely observed misery and
- hypocrisy have been his comic subjects all along. The funniest
- scene depicts desperate attempts at suicide by a deranged
- housewife, brilliantly played by Jennifer Wiltsie, that are
- cheerily misunderstood by a passel of busybody "friends." Body
- Language posits a scientific mishap that leads to a body swap
- between two women, an ascetic fitness fanatic over whom men
- drool and a hedonistic slob whom men mock and abuse. It could
- be a feminist diatribe, but Ayckbourn never lets dialectic
- overwhelm compassion.
- </p>
- <p> The season-saving actor is Michael Gambon, best known in the
- U.S. for starring in the quirky TV mini-series The Singing
- Detective. Gambon gives his finest, subtlest performance yet
- in Ayckbourn's Man of the Moment as a meek, awkward bank clerk
- thrust among celebrities on the Costa del Sol. Buttoned and
- besweatered despite the heat, walking and even sitting as
- though on eggshells, relentlessly dull and relentlessly decent,
- Gambon is a man who lives by principle being belittled by
- people who live for style. He has been summoned for a TV
- documentary recalling his moment of heroism years before, when
- he confronted an armed bank robber who has become a TV
- chat-show host. To the documentary producer's disappointment,
- Gambon won't quarrel with the man who threatened him and maimed
- his future wife. He feels no envy of the other man's wealth
- and, strikingly, no bitterness, in part because he believes the
- incident led to all the modest benefits of his life, including
- the very chance to marry that once beautiful woman. As many an
- artist has learned, nothing is harder onstage than to make good
- more intriguing than evil. Ayckbourn and Gambon do it.
- </p>
- <p> The director, Peter Hall, who founded the Royal Shakespeare
- Company and succeeded Laurence Olivier as head of the National,
- now seeks to mount the classics at a profit. Having triumphed
- with Vanessa Redgrave in Tennessee Williams' Orpheus Descending
- and with Dustin Hoffman in The Merchant of Venice--both
- productions that moved to Broadway--he has undertaken,
- without a megastar this time, to debunk Moss Hart's witticism
- that the way to get even with any producer is to persuade him
- to mount an Ibsen revival.
- </p>
- <p> The Wild Duck, customarily dour, turns out in Hall's
- interpretation to be buffoonishly funny while retaining every
- bit of its escalating horror. Hall's central insight is that
- the main characters, erstwhile school friends, are boys who
- have aged but not grown up. As the improvident photographer and
- family man Hjalmar Ekdal, Alex Jennings pouts and proffers
- endless excuses. As the highborn renegade Gregers Werle, David
- Threlfall (Smike in Nicholas Nickleby) grins with the chilling
- smugness of a religious cultist as he peddles his extremist
- slogans, sadism masquerading as idealism. In some ways this is
- a Wild Duck subtly informed by Peer Gynt: the women are all
- strong and nurturing, the men all feckless and childlike. What
- is most remarkable is that Hall, aided by Threlfall's scary
- believability, makes the play's nasty events feel natural
- rather than freakish. At a production like this, the very
- quintessence of Ibsenism, Broadway's traditional envy of London
- makes good sense.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-