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- <text id=94TT1498>
- <title>
- Oct. 31, 1994: Theater:Shylock on the Beach
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/THEATER, Page 78
- Shylock On the Beach
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Peter Sellars audaciously reimagines The Merchant of Venic
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> "When I direct Shakespeare," theatrical innovator Peter Sellars
- once said, "the first thing I do is go to the text for cuts.
- I go through to find the passages that are real heavy, that
- really are not needed, places where the language has become
- obscure, the places where there is a bizarre detour." And then?
- "I take those moments, those elements, and I make them the centerpiece,
- the core of the production."
- </p>
- <p> In the sober matter of staging Shakespeare, such audaciousness
- is hard to resist--though a lot of Chicago theatergoers have
- been able to. Typically, a third of the people who show up at
- the Goodman Theatre to see Sellars' ingenious reworking of The
- Merchant of Venice walk out before the evening is over. It's
- no mystery why: the evening isn't over for nearly four hours
- (and this is one of Shakespeare's relatively short plays). Beyond
- that, the production pretty much upends everything the audience
- has come to expect from one of Shakespeare's most troubling
- but reliably entertaining comedies.
- </p>
- <p> The play has been transplanted from the teeming, multicultural
- world of 15th century Venice, Italy, to the teeming, multicultural
- world of 1994 Venice Beach, California, where Sellars lives
- when he isn't setting Don Giovanni in Spanish Harlem, putting
- King Lear in a Lincoln Continental or deconstructing other classic
- plays and operas. Shylock, along with the play's other Jews,
- is black. Antonio, the merchant of the title, and his kinsmen
- are Latinos. Portia, the wealthy maiden being wooed by Antonio's
- friend Bassanio, is Asian. But the racial shuffling is just
- one of Sellars' liberties. The stage is furnished with little
- but office furniture, while video screens simulcast the actors
- in close-up during their monologues (and, in between, display
- seemingly unrelated Southern California scenes, from gardens
- and swimming pools to the L.A. riots). Cries of anguish come
- from the clowns, and the playfully romantic final scene, in
- which Portia teases Bassanio for giving away her ring to the
- lawyer she played in disguise, is reimagined as the darkest,
- most poisonously unsettling passage in the play.
- </p>
- <p> Some of this seems to be sheer perversity, but the real shock
- of Sellars' production is how well it works both theatrically
- and thematically. The racial casting, for instance, is a brilliant
- way of defusing the play's anti-Semitism--turning it into
- a metaphor for prejudice and materialism in all its forms. Paul
- Butler plays Shylock with basso-profundo self-assurance; he's
- a hardhearted ghetto businessman who, even when he is humiliated
- at the end, never loses his cool or stoops for pity.
- </p>
- <p> Wrongheaded and tortuous as this Merchant sometimes is, the
- updating is witty and apt. The "news of the Rialto" becomes
- fodder for a pair of gossip reporters on a happy-talk TV newscast.
- Shylock's trial is presided over by a mumbling, superannuated
- judge who could have stepped right out of Court TV. With a few
- exceptions--Elaine Tse's overwrought Portia, for instance--the actors strike a nice balance between Shakespeare's poetry
- and Sellars' stunt driving. For the rest of us, it's a wild
- ride.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-