No Errors in Bard's Equivocation
Monday, July 14, 2014
Behold - the head - of a traitor! - Anton Lipovetsky's severed head - Heidi Wilkinson Bard Props |
I saw Bard’s Co-production (Belfry Theatre, Victoria and directed by Michael Shamata) of Bill Cain’s Equivocation last Thursday. It left me in turmoil and more so when Bard Artistic Director Christopher Gaze sent me a PDF version of Cain’s script.
Last night, Sunday at the opening
performance of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline I made a point to ask Richard Wolfe,
Artistic Director of Pii Theatre on his experience in reading scripts. He told
me that many of them have no added information and that playwrights,
particularly George Bernard Shaw published and publish scripts they know lay people will read.
This was not the case with Cain’s script.
Reading his comments and instructions is a separate laugh (joy) all of its own.
Equivocation, the play, written in 2008 by Bill Cain who
is a member of the Society of Jesus is dedicated:
This play is dedicated with great love to
Kevin Bradt. When in despair over Equivocation, I’d call him up and say,
“Nobody is ever going to want to see this play,” he always said the same thing
– “I want to see it.” So I wrote it for him. It was the last play he ever saw.
He loved it. So this is for Kevin.
Now Kevin M. Bradt happens to also be a
Jesuit who taught at the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley. Why Equivocation was the last play
he saw is not clear, but I did find the obituary of one Kevin Michael Bradt who
died in California
in December 2008.
Kevin Bradt said of his friend’s TV series
Nothing Sacred:
Kevin Bradt accented God's gift of freedom
and its role in human drama. We do not always use that freedom well, even with
the help of revelation. Our 4,000-year tradition of Jewish and Christian living
with the light of revelation affirms that God loves believers even when we use
our freedom to make terrible mistakes. In fact, God keeps doing something
important among us and through our lives. In a sense there is nothing big or
sacred about our day to day existence; yet everything about our days is
significant, special, sacred. Nothing is so profane, that God is not there with
us. Narrative is able to portray this complexity. Nothing Sacred sought to do
so.
The above may be all too long to interest
anybody wanting to read a quick one on a Bard on the Beach play. But if the
above in any way has sparked an interest soldier on.
I am a baptized, confirmed, etc Roman
Catholic whose mother sent him to a Catholic boarding school, St, Edward’s High
School, in Austin, Texas.
My teacher of religion, Brother Edwin
Reggio, C.S.C. told us about the Jesuit motto AMDG (Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam) or
all for the greater glory of God. What this meant was that any personal act is
significant if we give it direction. If the direction is towards the glory of
God then even brushing your teeth can be significant, but perhaps not as much
as the narrative of a play. I have always been an admirer of the Jesuits and particularly now that an Argentine Jesuit is Pope. But more than ever after seeing and reading this play it is about my admiration for the mind of these intelligent men.
Equivocation, is a serious and complex play
that has many funny moments. Some of them come from the fact that the cast of 6
play, at least two roles each. The changing of roles can come from a rapid
costume change (there must be an army of fast-dressers in back) or simply with expression and gesture.
In a nutshell the play is about Shakespeare
(in this play called Shag for Shagspeare) who is about to write a play (plausible but
not in fact) commissioned by King James 1st via his leading minister Robert Cecil about the 1605 Gunpowder Plot in London. It is about how this led to
frustrations and, yes, several incidents of equivocation which ultimately
resulted in the retrieval from a laundry basket of a discarded play set in Scotland
and having three witches. We find that Bonnie King James was partial to witches and was related to Banquo.
The Cain script is full of delightful advice to the director:
Sharpe/Conspirator (played by Anton
Lipovetsky)
(swashbuckling)
May! Let us rather hold fast the mortal
sword and bestride our down-fall’s birthdom.
Sharpe, zorro-s with his sword and is,
in general, delighted with himself and
his costume.
Scene 5 – The Gunpowder Plot –Shag’s First Draft – Night.
A full-on Shakespeare period play. Props.
Costumes. All of it. Let later drafts be more naturalistic. Here we hear the
pentameter and are conscious of it. Enter The Priest in a traditional black
robe.
Judith (Shag’s daughter) played by Rachel Cairns
(mostly to herself)
Plays have beginnings and endings. That’s
two lies right there…And people listen. When does that ever happen?...And they
care what happens – even if it’s not happening to them.
(to the audience)
How could there be anything true about a
play?
Judith surveys the audience. Then speaks to
them. Judith doesn’t judge things. She simply
notices them.
Witch/Armin (Shawn Macdonald)
(collecting pages from the ground)
Waitwaitwait - This is not way to treat a script! (pages assembled roughly)
Got it!
For the only time in the play, the witches are very Halloween withch-t! Full-tilet, larger than life witchy witchy witches!
Witch/Armin (Shawn Macdonald)
(collecting pages from the ground)
Waitwaitwait - This is not way to treat a script! (pages assembled roughly)
Got it!
For the only time in the play, the witches are very Halloween withch-t! Full-tilet, larger than life witchy witchy witches!
I could go on and on..
Anousha Alamian plays Nate (a member of
Shakespeare’s cooperative) and Sir Robert Cecil. Alamian’s Cecil is scary and oily. He walks with
a limp and a hunched back but instantly is not Cecil but Nate (and a few
characters more) with a flicker in the face and a change of posture. Alamian is
mocked by Gerry Mackay (plays Richard Burbage/ Father Henry Garnet (the Jesuit)
by playing Richard III with the limp in one of the many plays within the play
(and within that play) of Equivocation.
Rachel Cairns is Judith with
contemporary accent and gesturing (she reminded my wife and I of our 17
year-old granddaughter) and an unwavering precision performance that wonderfully clashes
with the emotions of all the others who preen, shout, cry and scream. In fact Cairns to me was that
blind seer Tiresias present in many ancient Greek plays. We know what’s going
on because she is there to tell us.
Bob Frazer as Shagspeare is able to insert
a person into the myth and the enigma that is Shakespeare. Through his
Shagspeare and Cain’s words we explore ethical questions that affect us today.
Anton Lipovetsky plays Sharp (in
Shakespeare’s company), and King James via an atrociously wonderful Lear. As
Sharp he is the only one allowed to somehow break Judith’s impenetrable
stability with a kiss. As Tom Wintour
one of the jailed Gunpowder Plot conspirators he realistically loses his head
but keeps it firmly on as one the most entertaining kings, not in any
Shakespeare plays, King James the 1st. There is a possibility that
while Shagspeare in Equivocation, says,” I don’t do propaganda," and he does his best not to
sell his soul to James via Cecil, there is that line in Macbeth (and in
Equivocation):
"Some I see that two-fold balls and
treble sceptres carry," said by Macbeth which is all about the joining of
the scepters of Scotland and England. Shakespeare is making sure of
obtaining the patronage of the literate king. He did in the King's Men.
Shawn Macdonald plays Armin (in Shakespeare’s
company) and Cecil’s brother-in-law advocate Sir Edward Coke. If ever this
successful actor, very good at oily parts decides to sell used cars I would
advise against it. I would never buy a used car from this man!
Gerry Mackay plays Richard Burbage but is
best as Father Henry Garnet the Jesuit and expert on equivocation. If Rachel
Cairns’s Judith tell us how things are Mackay’s Garnet tells us how things
should be.
No review of this play can be an authentic
one, I believe unless it is seen more than once. A good way of almost seeing it
again is to see Cymbeline in which the above six players are joined by only one
more, Benjamin Elliott and his accordion. I looked forward to seeing Cymbeline
wondering how Cairns
would now play a strong but emotional woman that is Imogen. And somehow I knew
ahead of time that the Lipovetsky character would lose his head in that play,
too!
As I watched these six going from one role to another I imagined Anousha Alamain playing Richard III or Iago or just about any villain in Shakespeare. Macbeth? Yes, too! Curiously I saw two Hamlets, Rachel Cairns (and why not?) and Shawn Macdonald who would be able to show lots of inner turmoil in spades. We will have to wait a tad for Gerry Mackay to play Lear. Bob Frazer has played most of the lead rolls of Shakespeare and Shakespeare himself. The solemn temples, the great globe itself beckon for him.
A Midsummer's Night Dream
The Tempest
Are melted into thin air
A mole cinque-spotted
A Midsummer's Night Dream
The Tempest
Are melted into thin air
A mole cinque-spotted