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- <text id=89TT3251>
- <title>
- Dec. 11, 1989: Dreamscapes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 109
- Dreamscapes
- </hdr><body>
- <qt> <l>MYSTERY OF THE ROSE BOUQUET</l>
- <l>by Manuel Puig</l>
- </qt>
- <p> In Kiss of the Spider Woman, the novel of two mismatched
- prison inmates that became an Oscar-winning film, Manuel Puig
- portrayed how enforced intimacy can impel people to enter each
- other's psyches. Mystery of the Rose Bouquet, now at Los
- Angeles' Mark Taper Forum, explores the same phenomenon. This
- time the setting is a hospital in Argentina, and the characters
- who drift into each other's dreamscapes are women -- an old
- contrary patient, rich and autocratic (Anne Bancroft), and a
- middle-aged nurse whose outward cheer belies a lifetime of
- thwarted opportunity and scant satisfaction (Jane Alexander).
- </p>
- <p> By the end, they achieve an emotional bond -- a standard
- for hospital melodrama -- but in reveries rather than everyday
- contact. The patient becomes a stand-in for the nurse's dead
- mother; the nurse is transformed into the patient's long-lost
- sister, then an estranged daughter. The little dramas of
- hospital routine thus become freighted with the burdens of
- decades. Trivial exchanges achieve the dimensions of catharsis.
- Puig deftly interweaves other themes, including the oppression
- of all women under Latin machismo and the extent to which South
- Americans may still defensively see theirs as a colonial
- culture.
- </p>
- <p> Bancroft, playing a South American aristocrat, sounds more
- like South Brooklyn and about as aristocratic as a hash-house
- waitress. Alexander ably sketches differences among the
- dowager's airhead sister, mean daughter and timid nurse, but,
- as the last, lapses into a singsong that has become her
- trademark shorthand for innocence. Adding to the problem, Robert
- Allan Ackerman's archly formal staging emphasizes ritual over
- a sense of place. Still, the two women establish an ever
- shifting power dynamic. In the last fantasy, when they embrace
- fondly in an imagined courtyard, their warmth and urgency enable
- the audience to share in an emotional payoff.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-