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The Castle
Franz Kafka
Near the end of The
Castle, K sits outside the forever closed gate of the mysterious castle to which he
desperately wants to gain admittance. Herr Erlanger, top secretary to the all-powerful
Herr Klamm, has a line that is almost a throwaway. He mentions to K that he could indeed
sit there, perhaps forever, waiting in vain to get in, but reminds him that there are
paths amongst the trees that lead away. He might just follow one of them and see where it
goes. In other words, he could walk away from his fruitless obsession.
It is an odd play, to the sophisticated viewer almost devoid of
suspense, since what Kafka protagonist ever actually wins his battle with the forces
pitted against him? The only question that remains is what the character learns. Does he,
like Sisyphus, earn some nobility by understanding and accepting the pitiful existential
condition to which he is doomed?
K---he has no other name---is a "land surveyor," and he is
unsuccessfully trying to reach the castle on the hill above a tiny village in order to
fulfill what he believes is an assignment to do some work. The villagers are a mysterious,
suspicious lot, all in the service of the castle in one way or another. To succeed, K must
follow the rules they set down, but the rules melt before his eyes like Dali's watches.
David Fishelson and Aaron Leichter have created a smooth and powerful
adaptation of Max Brod's dramatic version of the tale. It is a chilling nightmare with
echoes of Alice in Wonderland, Oedipus Rex, and even The Wizard of
Oz. K, however, has no Toto to pull the curtain aside to reveal the funny little man
pulling the levers.
As K, William Atherton offers a bravura performance. He is quite
impudent as the story begins, fresh out of the world of logical cause and effect. His
confidence, piece by piece, is slowly cut away. He steals Herr Klamm's mistress, but
doesn't seem to realize that no good can come of that. Nothing seems to work-he doesn't
even get much pleasure from his new mistress. He is perpetually frustrated, and he could
just throw up his hands and walk away, but he doesn't. This is part of the strange power
of the play, and seems both mysterious and oddly familiar at the same time. Who, after
all, has not pursued a path, a goal, an obsession far beyond the reasonable?
Atherton beautifully captures the cockiness, the growing frustration
and eventual despair of the character. His resume is heavy in the area of film acting,
but here in an off-Broadway theatre he seems perfectly at home. He uses the full range of
his voice, he projects his emotions to the back row of the theatre, he finds the dark
humor in Kafka, and he knows how and when to remain silent and motionless, with confidence
that the audience will do some of the work for him.
Rich voiced, sexy Catherine Curtin plays Herr Klamm's mistress with
visceral power, sly humor, and sometimes frightening rage. Her voice, when she chooses to
employ its full power, could be a weapon against terrorism. Jim Parson and Grant James
Varjas prance and stumble---with an unsettling blend of horror and hilarity---as K's
identical assistants, Jeremiah and Arthur.
Scenic designer Anna Louizos has created a flexible, chilly setting.
Much of the action takes place in a giant plastic box that has the look of a huge ice
cube. Scott Schwartz is a director known for his strong sense of theatricality and the
outrageous. His recent credits include Bat Boy, The Musical and tick, tick
Boom! Here he perfectly
captures the fluid movement from one absurd moment to the next even more absurd moment. He
has helped his actors create characterizations that are over the top and yet seem firmly
based and emotionally true at the same time
New York,
January 20,
2002
- Roy Sorrels