Updated ‘Lion in Winter’ crackles with power
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Tom Titus
Upon first viewing the setting for Vanguard University’s “The Lion in
Winter,” you assume you must be in the wrong venue. Playwright James
Goldman wrote this savagely comedic play about King Henry II of
England, circa 1183, and Vanguard’s stage appears set for a revival
of “Charley’s Aunt.”
Then there’s the introduction of individual characters -- to an
amalgam of Motown and disco music -- before the first line of
dialogue is uttered. The queen arrives boogieing down to “Set Me
Free, Why Don’t You, Babe,” which makes sense since she’s been
Henry’s prisoner for the last 10 years.
Director Marianne Savell has pushed the fast-forward button on her
history book and set this 12th century epic in 1983, but left its
dialogue intact. This concept often works fine with Shakespearean
fiction, but these were real kings and queens who plotted wars and
palace coups seven centuries ago, rendering the adaptation more
difficult to accept.
Having said that, it also must be admitted that Vanguard’s “The
Lion in Winter” is one terrific powerhouse of a production. The
college’s multi-talented artistic director, Susan Berkompas, had long
been wired in for the role of the captive queen Eleanor, and she’s
joined by two other professional actors -- Richard Davies as Henry
and Darren Kjeldsen as the oldest surviving son, Richard, destined to
rule one day.
With this sort of megawatt acting power, the play could be set on
a desert island for all the physical distraction it might engender.
Yet the dialogue incongruities remain in the discussion of wars and
uprisings, although Savell has trimmed all references to Eleanor’s
being Henry’s chronological senior, since Berkompas obviously is much
younger than Davies.
When these two clash, cuddle and clash again, it’s like watching
George and Martha from “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” Davies
glories in his regal power and in his taunting of the three sons over
which will be heir to the throne. It’s a superlative exercising of
wit and willpower from which Vanguard students can learn volumes.
As his discarded queen, Berkompas delivers an outstanding
fire-and-ice portrayal, her wide eyes telegraphing her inner
motivation and flashing with ironic glee after each victory in the
continuing battle royal. Her tender scenes with the young woman she
has known since childhood and who now has become her rival for
Henry’s affections are particularly involving.
Kjeldsen depicts the warrior prince Richard as a bold, ballistic
force whose raw ambition renders him unlovable as a son. Mark Parker
deftly enacts the middle son, Geoffrey, as a Machiavellian schemer,
changing allegiances with each shift of the wind.
The youngest prince, John, traditionally has been played as a
weakling and a buffoon. Adam Hurst goes a bit further in his
portrayal, rendering the character as a bratty, tantrum-throwing,
oversized juvenile delinquent. Amy Maier, who shares the role of
Henry’s mistress Alais with Elisabeth Rose, is stunning as “the only
pawn” among the kings, queens and lords, offering a performance of
delicate sensibility.
The only discordant note in the Vanguard production is A.J.
Teaters’ Philip, king of France. Teaters plays the young monarch as a
punk rocker with an irritating accent who turns his one scene of
magnitude into a torrent of overstatement.
Tim Mueller’s scenic design -- though totally wrong for this play
-- is nevertheless attractive and well detailed, as is the lighting
design of Dan Volonte and Tina Nelson. Costumer Lia Hansen has
created some striking garments, except for Teaters’ decidedly
un-kingly attire, with Berkompas in particular appearing quite regal.
“The Lion in Winter” was one of the more important plays of the
1960s, and setting it 700 years past its time may be somewhat
difficult for audiences to swallow, yet the power and perception of
its performances at Vanguard University soon erase these misgivings.
It has, strangely, long been categorized as a comedy -- even though
knives are at throats -- and this version is about as funny as it
gets, albeit retaining its rich, dramatic power.
DRAMA, MUSIC MEET AT UCI
UC Irvine will launch the world premiere of a play/opera, Charles
Mee’s “The War to End War,” this weekend, a combined project of UCI’s
drama and music departments in the university’s Claire Trevor
Theater.
Drama professor Annie Loui, who staged Mee’s “Big Love” last
season, is directing the show. Robin Buck is the vocal director and
Stephen Tucker conducts the orchestra. The production, which freshly
interprets and enhances Mee’s play of the same name from the 1980s,
features a new score by Nathan Birnbaum.
“The War to End War” zeroes in on the nature of war, moving from
the Treaty of Versailles, through the eruptions between wars
represented in a cabaret performance, to an eerie poker game played
by the creators of the atom bomb at Los Alamos.
Performances will be given tonight and Saturday and April 29
through May 1 at 8 p.m., with matinees Saturday and May 1 at 2 p.m.
Call (949) 824-2787 for ticket information.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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