Actors and directors love to do classic works. It gives them a chance to size themselves up against the myths and memories of earlier, legendary performances and
productions. And those of us who
are theater junkies love to see them do it. That gives us the chance to look
anew at these works that define the theatrical canon and, perhaps, to witness some history in the making.
This explains how I ended
up seeing two versions of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya within just the last four
weeks.
The first was the Soho Rep production, directed by the
ubiquitous Sam Gold from a new adaptation by his frequent collaborator
playwright Annie Baker and starring a treasure chest of New York’s best stage
actors. It was scheduled to run
for a month and close on July 15, but has proven such a must-see that it’s now
been extended through Aug. 26.
The second production is the Sydney Theatre Company’s,
helmed by the Hungarian director Tamás Ascher, who is considered one of the
world’s reigning Chekhov interpreters, from an adaptation by the company’s
co-artistic director Andrew Upton and starring Upton’s wife and co-artistic
director, the Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett. Its brief run at City
Center as part of this summer’s Lincoln Center Festival ends this weekend (click here to read about the evolution of their production).
The New York Times’ Ben Brantley so loved the
Ascher-Upton-Blanchett version when it played at the Kennedy Center last year
(it gets “under your skin like no other I have seen,” he wrote; click here to
read the whole review) that despite the disappointing experience I’d had the last time I
saw Uncle Vanya (click here to read that review) my theatergoing buddy Bill and I bought tickets as soon as they
went on sale.
But just a few weeks later, I read that Soho Rep was
planning to do the play and I couldn’t resist seeing what three of my very
favorite showmakers—Gold, Baker and the inestimable Reed Birney as the
disillusioned Vanya—would do with it and so Bill and I bought tickets for that
one as well.
And I’m glad we took the double dip because the companies
have taken radically different approaches to the play. And both are worth seeing.
Gold and Baker’s is
almost aggressively contemporary and emphasizes the melancholy of this play
about a group of interrelated
and unhappy people whom economic circumstances have forced to share a Russian country house
(click here to read about the thinking behind their version).
Baker, who is credited with the costuming, has dressed the
actors in the kind of casual street clothes they might have worn in the
rehearsal room. Andrew Lieberman’s set looks like thrift-shop cast-offs and Mark
Barton’s lighting design leans heavily on the on-set lamps that stagehands and the actors
plug in to signal the start of each act.
It’s a determinedly no-frills take on the play that reminded
me of David Cromer’s revelatory modern-dress version of Our Town and the new no-set, no-props Cock: in all three cases, the viewer is forced to focus on the play
because there’s not much else there but the play.
This stripped-down aesthetic extends to the seating for the
Soho Vanya. The inside of the theater has been arranged so that there are no
real seats. Instead, the audience sits on carpet-covered platforms that
surround the playing area. It creates an intimate space in which to see the
play but unless you’re in the first row there’s no where to put your legs.
Most people, except for the occasional women unlucky enough
to be wearing a skirt, sat yoga style at our performance. But, as my numbed knees will attest, it’s not the most comfortable way
to see a play.
So it’s a testament to the production that I was not only
riveted by it, but moved as well. Although Baker’s language is decidedly
modern, the play’s themes of unrequited love and missed opportunities are
timeless. And the actors she and Gold have assembled are fearless in exploring
them.
Birney is unsurprisingly excellent as Vanya but the spotlight
may have been stolen by Michael Shannon, who brings an edgy, idiosyncratic charm to
the role of Astrov, the doctor who falls in love with Yelena, the restless wife of the much-older professor who is his patient.
Meanwhile Merritt Wever, best known as the cheery junior
nurse on TV’s “Nurse Jackie,” is wrenching as Sonya, Vanya’s self-effacing
niece who is helplessly in love with the doctor and who gives the play’s famous
final speech which, in this production, becomes an elegy for all those who
lead lives of quiet desperation.
There is more comedy in the equally conversational
adaptation that Uptown has written for the Sydney Company. And it’s a fancier production. He and
Ascher have updated the time period from Czarist Russia at the turn of the last
century to the Soviet Union at midcentury.
Ascher’s longtime collaborator Zsolt Khell has designed an
elegant dacha that is just rundown enough to suggest the economic hardships
that all but the highest members of the Communist Party endured during that
period.
And costume designer Györgi
Szakács has underscored the class differences in this supposedly classless society by incorporating touches of peasant wear into the outfits of the
characters who live in the country, while dressing the professor and Yelena,
who have recently arrived from Moscow, in sleeker, more fashionable outfits.
Blanchett, long a favorite of fashion magazine editors,
looks fabulous in these clothes. And, of course, she acts fabulously too. Chekhov
is prized by actors because he wrote roles that allow them to show off both their
dramatic and comedic talents, often within the same scene. Summoning her considerable skills,
Blanchett makes Yelena simultaneously spoiled and unfulfilled, slapstick silly and
achingly sad.
She is well matched by Richard Roxburgh who plays the
hapless Vanya (although I found Roxburgh to be so endearing that it was hard to
understand why Yelena wouldn’t respond to him) and by Hugo Weaving, familiar to
fans of “The Matrix” and “Lord of the Rings” movie trilogies, who plays an
equally alluring Astrov.
They and their colleagues have created a stylish and
intelligent production. And yet,
it didn’t move me in the way that the one at Soho Rep did. Bill, on the other
hand, felt exactly the opposite way.
He admired the work the Soho Rep company did but was transported by the
Sydney crew, even though the acoustics in City Center made it difficult to hear
everything those actors said.
That, of course, is the magic of great theater. And it is the reason those of us who
love theater grab at the chance to see great works, particularly when presented
by artists of this caliber, over and over again.
1 comment:
I saw the Sydney Theatre Company production. It was my first Uncle Vanya, my first Chekhov play, and my feelings were mixed.
I was in the back of the orchestra at City Center and I really strained to hear during Act I. I also felt very far away from the stage. Also, I thought I'd go in completely cold I didn't even read the synopsis in the program. That was a mistake!
But I liked Act II a lot better. The actors seemed to be projecting better and I knew who the characters were, their relationships to each other.
Cate Blanchett is stunning but I ended up being moved by Richard Roxburgh as Vanya and Hayley McElhinney as Sonya. They were heart-wrenching to the point where the attempts at humor seemed inappropriate. There was nothing funny about their plight, about how they felt unappreciated and unloved.
Anyway, I wish I could see the SoHo Rep production. But I'm definitely hoping to catch the Christopher Durang spin this fall off Broadway, with David Hyde Pierce and Sigourney Weaver.
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