`WICKED SONGS' BRILLIANT, PREDICTABLE IN SAME BREATH.Byline: Paul Hodgins Orange County Register `Art is knowing the basic rules and when to deviate from them,'' a crusty Viennese music teacher advises his arrogant American student in Jon Marans' ``Old Wicked Songs,'' making its West Coast debut at the Geffen Playhouse The Geffen Playhouse (or the Geffen) is a not for profit performing arts theater in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Originally named the Westwood Playhouse, UCLA purchased the property in 1993. UCLA's then chancellor, Charles E. . If Marans had followed his character's advice, he might have turned a well-crafted, frequently brilliant play into something greater than it is. For all its pleasures, ``Old Wicked Songs'' leaves one feeling that familiar paths have been chosen to the detriment of two wonderfully complex characters who could have gone in much more interesting directions, had Marans given them the chance. The maxim-filled teacher is Professor Josef Mashkan (Hal Robinson Harold Hall ("Hal") Robinson (born July 29, 1952) is an American classical double bass player. He is currently the principal bassist of the Philadelphia Orchestra. Early life and education Robinson was born in Houston, Texas, the son of Keith Robinson and Dorothe Fowler. ), who at first seems like one of those eccentric Mitteleuropa mensches who populate To plug in chips or components into a printed circuit board. A fully populated board is one that contains all the devices it can hold. old Hollywood films. Stephen Hoffman (Justin Kirk) has traveled to Mashkan's fusty atelier to try to solve a problem: He's a former piano prodigy who, at 25, has lost his ability to play. At first, it's an oil-and-water match. Mashkan is courtly court·ly adj. court·li·er, court·li·est 1. Suitable for a royal court; stately: courtly furniture and pictures. 2. Elegant; refined: courtly manners. and Old World; Stephen brash and arrogant. Mashkan is moved to tears by music, yet has little technical talent; Stephen is brimming with virtuosity vir·tu·os·i·ty n. pl. vir·tu·os·i·ties 1. The technical skill, fluency, or style exhibited by a virtuoso or a composition. 2. An appreciation for or interest in fine objects of art. , but his music-making, like his life, is drained of emotion. Stephen has been tricked into studying with Mashkan, a vocal coach A vocal coach is a person, who works with singers on their singing technique, care and development of the voice, performance and preparation of a work. The coach may give instruction to the singer in private lessons, on stage, or during a recording session. , by his piano teacher, and he's furious about it. It's a predictable set-up - you know these two will eventually find common ground through catharsis catharsis Purging or purification of emotions through art. The term is derived from the Greek katharsis (“purgation,” “cleansing”), a medical term used by Aristotle as a metaphor to describe the effects of dramatic tragedy on the spectator: by - but in the first act, at least, Marans' finely tuned writing and the skill of the actors (who played the roles in the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of production) make such inevitability irrelevant. Kirk, who looks a little like a young Richard Benjamin, does marvelous things with his voice: It's self-consciously flat, uninflected and nasal, like he's trying to squeeze the feeling out of everything he says. Sometimes Kirk lets Stephen's deadpan-at-all-costs delivery seem overly affected, but it makes for some delightful comic moments. Robinson's Mashkan is the more naturalistic performance, and ultimately the more rewarding. (He is helped by Marans' writing, which reveals Mashkan slowly, one layer at a time.) Like a lot of older Europeans who lived through World War II, a profound sadness and resignation lurk beneath Mashkan's gentle-curmudgeon exterior. Early on, Mashkan lies about having a wife; we and Stephen soon discover that he has been a widower widower n. a man whose wife died while he was married to her and has not remarried. WIDOWER. A man whose wife is dead. A widower has a right to administer to his wife's separate estate, and as her administrator to collect debts due to her, generally for for 10 years. It's a harbinger of deeper revelations to come. Unfortunately, ``Old Wicked Songs'' founders on these darker elements. Secrets of Mashkan's past turn the play into a heavy psychodrama psychodrama /psy·cho·dra·ma/ (-drah´mah) a form of group psychotherapy in which patients dramatize emotional problems and life situations in order to achieve insight and to alter faulty behavior patterns. that exploits the war's horror for its full emotional worth. Marans pushes the characters and us into pitch-black territory that seems both too easy a route and rather unmerited. You can also sense it coming a mile off. We've seen this kind of soul-searching before, and while it makes for moving theater, it's hard to square it with such a comedic premise. The play's most brilliant aspect is its use of music. Marans has weaved Schumann's famous song cycle, the Dichterliebe, into the plot in such a way that it informs and motivates the story. Schumann's bittersweet bittersweet, name for two unrelated plants, belonging to different families, both fall-fruiting woody vines sometimes cultivated for their decorative scarlet berries. treatment of Heinrich Heine's love poetry allows Mashkan to make trenchant comments about the intermingled pain and joy that all good art possesses, and it prompts a lot of interesting conversation and music-making around Mashkan's grand piano (some almost imperceptible im·per·cep·ti·ble adj. 1. Impossible or difficult to perceive by the mind or senses: an imperceptible drop in temperature. 2. computer enhancement improves the actors' keyboard skills). Other elements, as well, are masterful, if not without fault. Markas Henry's sets and costumes give us an evocative sense of mid-'80s Vienna (but Stephen's three-button suit seems like a '90s anomaly). Director Seth Barrish helps reconcile the play's emotional poles through careful changes of lighting and pacing, although the first act seems a bit rushed, as if the actors know their parts a little too well. The same could be said, finally, for Marans' writing. A play with this much inventiveness, humor and insight could have achieved greatness if its author had followed the professor's advice, broken a few rules, and taken us to places that are truly unexpected. THE FACTS What: ``Old Wicked Songs.'' Where: Geffen Playhouse, 10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood. When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 4 and 8:30 p.m. Sautrday, 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday; through Nov. 2. Tickets: $23 to $37.50. Call (310) 208-5454. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion