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- THEATER, Page 60Midsummer Night's Spectacle
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- Shakespeare is a reliable summer hit, especially performed outdoors.
- So why is he a hard sell under a roof in winter?
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- By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
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- As twilight slips over the hilly college town of Ashland,
- Oregon, the sweet summer evening seems too balmy and starry for
- whiling away indoors, even to the holiday throngs who have
- journeyed to attend the theater here. Fortunately they need not
- choose between pleasures. Night after night, vividly costumed
- Shakespeare -- preceded by madrigals and heralded by a flag
- raising and trumpet fanfare from the topmost gables of a Tudor
- stagehouse -- unfolds beneath an open sky, turning edification
- into festival.
-
- The scene takes place at the largest U.S. regional theater
- and one of the oldest (founded in 1935), a three-stage jamboree
- built on Bardolatry that draws 370,000 spectators a year, 90%
- from more than 125 miles away. With minor variations this scene
- also takes place in Boulder, Colorado; Cedar City, Utah; San
- Diego; Houston; Dallas; Orlando, Florida; an inner-city park in
- Louisville, Kentucky; the grounds of a legendary mansion
- alongside the Hudson River; New York City's Central Park; and
- dozens of other locales. According to Felicia Londre, secretary
- of the Shakespeare Theater Association of America, the U.S. has
- about 100 outdoor Shakespeare festivals. Some have grown, like
- Ashland's, into major institutions offering varied repertoires.
- Others operate just a few weeks a year. Nearly all rely on a lot
- of novice, non-Equity players. But almost all are thriving.
- Americans seemingly cannot get enough of the Bard in open air in
- summer -- though they are conspicuously less eager to see his
- work indoors at other times of the year.
-
- For many theatergoers, the experience of Shakespeare
- outdoors takes on an almost sacred character. When Richard Devin
- of the Colorado Shakespeare Festival moved this summer's staging
- of The Winter's Tale to a new indoor space and installed
- outdoors an adaptation of Sheridan's The Rivals, he quickly
- realized he had goofed. Not only did The Rivals prove an
- unusually tough sell, but subscribers wrote in fury. "They told
- me they would never come to Shakespeare indoors or accept
- another writer outdoors," Devin says. "They spoke of
- Shakespeare's universality and of what it meant to see these
- plays under the stars with their children. They felt we were
- stealing an irreplaceable opportunity from them."
-
- Other theater executives have noted a similar, almost
- fetishistic audience passion for Shakespeare. Even his problem
- plays have much more box-office appeal than masterpieces by
- almost anyone else. Says Bill Patton, Ashland's executive
- director, who has overseen its rise since 1948: "Some of
- Shakespeare's popularity may be that it's certified as good for
- you, so audiences can congratulate themselves on their
- intellectuality, even though this was popular entertainment for
- its time and still is. Also the plays are taught in school, so
- people feel familiar with them."
-
- Actors and directors tend to be ambivalent about staging
- the Bard outdoors. Only a dozen or so of his 37 plays
- consistently succeed outdoors both artistically and at the box
- office, and those mainly when staged in broad strokes. By common
- consent, the lighter comedies and the more swashbuckling
- histories fare best because they depend less on language that
- is easily lost in the night air and more on pageantry and
- action. Intimate texts and subtle, groundbreaking performances
- tend not to work in the wide and windy spaces. Soliloquies
- cannot compete with swordplay. Jerry Turner, who retired last
- year as Ashland's artistic director after nearly two decades,
- refused during his tenure to schedule Othello outdoors because
- he felt its closely chambered story and rich language ill fitted
- that setting. This year, after Ashland erected a stadium-like
- "acoustic shell" that wraps around the stage with tiers of
- balconies but leaves the sky open, Turner consented to try
- Othello outdoors. The flat and tedious result bears out his
- original judgment -- although the blame belongs mainly to the
- three principal performances, especially Mark Murphey's inert
- Iago.
-
- By contrast, Ashland's outdoor conflation of Henry VI,
- Parts 2 and 3, evokes far greater narrative satisfaction out of
- inferior material. And much the best show on offer there is an
- exquisitely nuanced All's Well That Ends Well, staged indoors
- by Turner's successor, Henry Woronicz. To the probable dismay
- of Ashland adherents -- some of whom buy vacation or retirement
- homes chiefly to attend plays -- Woronicz vows to "pull away
- from the scale of production and pageantry, even outside." To
- subscribers who urge elaborately costumed and staged period
- productions as "traditional," Woronicz replies, "That is the
- tradition of the 19th century, not Shakespeare's."
-
- Some artistic directors claim to find great value in
- working outdoors. Says Jack O'Brien of San Diego's Old Globe:
- "The shows are usually at their fairest and least phony outside.
- It's hard to stand next to a tree and speak archly. Even when
- we are doing Shakespeare indoors, I have often taken the cast
- outside during tech week and had a complete run-through just to
- get in touch with that honesty." O'Brien thinks Shakespeare's
- earlier plays almost all work outdoors, while his later ones
- mostly don't: "You can see in his poetry the adaptation from an
- open theater to a more enclosed one -- the way, for example, he
- speaks of light or time of day."
-
- His counterpart at the New York Shakespeare Festival,
- JoAnne Akalaitis, extols the "magic" of Shakespeare in Central
- Park: "Shakespeare in the park is part of the essence of being
- a cultural person in New York City. It is relaxed, warm, open
- and democratic. The upsides are the wind and clouds, the
- informality, coupled with the power that comes with that much
- massed humanity." She adds dryly, "The downside is the body
- miking." The Central Park sound system is notoriously tinny, and
- actors cannot seem to master the technique of not hitting the
- mikes when they scuffle, so every few minutes the audience hears
- what sounds like thunder. Another downside is the sheer size of
- the stage and audience, which can tempt film stars, fearful of
- understatement, into almost operatic playing. That happened last
- week to Marisa Tomei, the street-corner ingenue of My Cousin
- Vinny, in a vaudeville-influenced staging of The Comedy of
- Errors. While Brazilian director Caca Rosset emphasizes the many
- shades of emotion within the text, Tomei, a gifted stage
- veteran, struck one note: screeching fury.
-
- Whatever shortcomings artists may see, audiences seem to
- want Shakespeare outdoors more than ever. New troupes spring up
- each year as stage entrepreneurs discover what Ashland's
- founder, Angus Bowmer, learned in 1935. He staged boxing matches
- as a way to defray the costs of his outdoor Shakespeare shows.
- The boxing lost money. From the start, the Shakespeare turned
- a profit.
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