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- <text id=91TT2525>
- <title>
- Nov. 11, 1991: Arthur Miller Is a London Hit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 11, 1991 Somebody's Watching
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 100
- Arthur Miller, Old Hat at Home, Is a London Hit
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A bold new work by the playwright, 76, is one of several shows
- that are revitalizing the West End
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III
- </p>
- <p> Any new play by Arthur Miller is an important event in
- American culture. One as theatrically bold and intellectually
- subtle as The Ride Down Mt. Morgan is reason to shout for joy.
- Robustly funny, full of fantasy and hallucination yet easy to
- follow, it is free of the world-weary, elegiac tone of the four
- slight one-acts that had been Miller's sole stage output in the
- previous decade. At 76, the playwright has recaptured the
- vigorous voice and zest of middle age and has found a fresh,
- indeed engagingly oddball, way to revisit his accustomed theme
- of how to assess rugged individualism--as personal integrity
- or as social irresponsibility. Only one fact jars: this world
- premiere is delighting audiences not on Broadway but in London's
- West End. Says Miller: "They have a theater culture here in
- Britain. I don't think we do in New York City anymore. American
- commercial theater is dead. Why pretend that it isn't?"
- </p>
- <p> It is the common fate of playwrights to flower early, then
- fade from fashion long before they die and spend decades
- enduring agonizing public reappraisal of their early triumphs.
- That has been Miller's lot in the U.S., where commercial
- producers mostly write him off as a shopworn social reformer.
- In Britain Mt. Morgan is his 13th play to be seen in the West
- End in the past dozen years. Moreover, British critics and
- audiences accept him as the poetic expressionist he sees in
- himself, rather than the earnest realist that U.S. productions
- relentlessly turn him into. "In London," he says, "audiences and
- critics are not so bound to familiar forms, and I've been able
- to demonstrate that the works have contemporary validity. I
- would hope, if this play succeeds here, that people will say,
- `Why does he have to go to London?' But I fear the lesson won't
- be drawn."
- </p>
- <p> Something other than realism is unmistakable from the
- opening moments of Mt. Morgan. The title refers to an automobile
- skid in mid-blizzard that has left the central character, an
- aging insurance entrepreneur, physically shattered and confined
- to a hospital bed. Yet this wreckage of a man rises, leaving
- behind the outline of his slung and plastered body, to pace the
- stage and engage other characters in conversations he recalls,
- conversations he imagines, conversations he wants to have, and
- sometimes conversations he daydreams about in the midst of other
- conversations.
- </p>
- <p> There is almost no conventional plot. The accident, which
- may not have been an accident, exposes a tense situation: the
- businessman has two wives and families. The play ends with that
- conflict deliberately unresolved. The chief revelations occur
- in flashback, and the play's hallucinatory nature makes them all
- a little suspect.
- </p>
- <p> The businessman may lament losing contact with an
- illegitimate son he may have had by still another woman.
- Equally, he may have concocted this story just to dissuade his
- second wife from having an abortion. The man seemingly believes
- that on safari he once faced down a charging lion, which sniffed
- and retreated in apparent acknowledgment of a fellow animal
- presence. But the memory may be a mere metaphor for the kind of
- masculinity he is trying to keep alive. The facts ultimately
- matter far less than the moral dilemma: whether to mire oneself
- in dull decency, like the nice nurse whose family can devote a
- whole conversation to the merits of new shoes, or succumb to
- seductive selfishness.
- </p>
- <p> The text abounds in unusually shapely language for Miller,
- and in jokes. The production is not, alas, quite as polished.
- Tom Conti looks too young for Miller's antihero (although the
- script is inconsistent about his history) and seems too
- ingratiating. Perhaps the idea is to suggest that king-of-the-
- jungle fantasy persists in the most genial men; even so, Conti
- evokes intellectual posturing more than yearning. Gemma Jones
- is suitably antiseptic as his first wife, but Clare Higgins
- seems a bit stale for the younger second one, and Deirdre Strath
- just shouts as a grownup daughter.
- </p>
- <p> Miller's drama would be treasure enough by the standards
- of Broadway, where only six straight plays are on offer at the
- moment--three revivals, an Irish import, two holdovers from
- last season and nothing new. In London, however, it is the
- centerpiece of a stage scene abruptly aquiver after a couple of
- years of doldrums. New plays by David Hare, Alan Ayckbourn, Hugh
- Whitemore and Timberlake Wertenbaker have been running. Still
- to come this month are a one-act from Harold Pinter and Alan
- Bennett's The Madness of George III.
- </p>
- <p> As always, the West End is also a showcase for revivals:
- Our Town with Alan Alda and Robert Sean Leonard; Becket, with
- Derek Jacobi as the saintly bishop and Robert Lindsay as his
- carousing King; Tartuffe, with Paul Eddington as the dithery
- paterfamilias turned acolyte to a charlatan and Felicity Kendal
- as the saucy, commonsensical maid in a cheerily broad staging,
- almost willfully devoid of undertone or relevance, by Sir Peter
- Hall, founder of the Royal Shakespeare Company.
- </p>
- <p> The only slowdown in London comes in musicals. The handful
- of creators who, in various permutations, have brought forth
- Cats, Phantom of the Opera, Miss Saigon and the like have
- nothing new or imminent. Still, an irresistibly energetic and
- shamelessly folksy overgrown cabaret show, Five Guys Named Moe,
- featuring jazz of the 1930s and '40s and nonstop dancing by an
- all-black cast, has taken London by storm. It is headed for
- Broadway next April, complete with group singing of calypso
- bebop and a whole-audience conga line at intermission.
- </p>
- <p> The most impressive new British play, Hare's Murmuring
- Judges, starts as a panoramic survey of a criminal-justice
- system shamefully subverted by careerism and bureaucracy.
- Gradually the story focuses on a hapless petty burglar,
- imprisoned almost five years for a first offense. Hare, a
- left-winger, has a thumb on the scales: his inmate is penitent,
- as innocent of spirit as Candide. Moreover, the police are
- widely known to have tainted the evidence, but admitting that
- would inconvenience powerful people, so injustice prevails. Much
- of the dialogue is barely digested statistics; the silliest,
- mouthed by a reformist young black woman, argues that
- essentially every male under 30 is a criminal, so no one should
- be prosecuted. Despite such balderdash, the storytelling is
- intense and the acting splendid, especially by Robert Patterson
- as the prisoner.
- </p>
- <p> Ayckbourn's new play is actually two: The Revengers'
- Comedies trace, over two full shows, the misbegotten
- relationship between a middle-class urban man and a wealthy
- country maiden who meet while both are attempting suicide. They
- then agree, he halfheartedly and she ferociously, to avenge the
- sadness in each other's lives. He is an amiable also-ran. She,
- it becomes clear, is a psychopath. Ayckwho also directed, fought
- off all efforts to get him to consolidate the two segments into
- one long night. He was wrong. There is simply not enough of a
- payoff. But the work is often wickedly funny. It is well acted
- (especially, in a splendid cameo, by Adam Godley as the
- psychopath's languid, childlike aristocrat of a brother). And
- its portrayal of what it is like to be the target of someone
- truly crazy and obsessed lingers hauntingly, making the play
- more interesting to remember than to watch.
- </p>
- <p> When the 1991 London theater is recalled in longer memory,
- however, from a perspective approaching history, neither the
- Hare nor the Ayckbourn nor even the West End's renewed vitality
- will rate more than a passing mention. The epochal event will
- be The Ride Down Mt. Morgan--and Arthur Miller's stubborn
- climb back up to the pinnacle of his talent.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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