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Let the following remarks
serve as an homage to Harold Pinter who has just won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Pinter has been prolific, by common consent a sign of genius. Not including television and
film scripts and collaborations, he has written thirty-two theater pieces, the first of
which, The Room is being produced by The Atlantic Theater Company on a double
bill with his most recent work, Celebration. Together they offer a graceful
program and a token of honor to the playwrights accomplishment.
The Room is a short play, dense with elements Pinter would
develop significantly in many later works, in particular in The Caretaker. A domestic space
suggesting the security of home and hearth belongs to a working class man and wife, Bert
and Rose Hudd, seen from the outside. In seemingly random succession, several
persons arrive and chat familiarly about the weather, the house and similar
inconsequential matters. Then a climactic and terrifying explosion of gratuitous violence
occurs.
Applying Pinters own generalization that the meaning of his plays
lies in their titles, The Room pivots on a horrific contrast between appearance
and an unexpected reality, that old chestnut, between ordinary domestic place and
extraordinary occurrence. Rose Hudd (Mary Beth Peil), a homely, middle aged woman in
a worn cardigan, feels satisfied and grateful for her unpretentious little room. It is
knowable: You know where you are here she says several times, talking to
herself, remarking on the coziness of her place against the murderous cold
just outside her kitchen window. Her husband (Thomas Jay Ryan) reads his newspaper in
unbroken silence and soon goes off. No one bothers you here Rose tells
herself.
Thats the ironic tag line before a series of visitors invade
Roses space so that its stability turns out be illusory. A man appears whom Rose
addresses as the landlord, Mr. Kidd, but who reports on a couple looking for the landlord
in the basement. It is the first of several disjunct remarks that quickly destabilize
identity: Kidd may or may not be the landlord. The couple, perhaps the one referred to
earlier, arrive at Roses door and chat with her about "whose who" and
"what for," immediately creating another kind of estrangement in the familiar.
Rose begins to protest these incursions on her privacy. They add up to a feeling of menace
when blind Riley (Earl Hyman), a black man, comes with a mysterious message saying Rose is
to come home to her father. Or perhaps Riley is her father? The disturbing idea is left
hanging. Very few words are spoken; Rose screams in confusion bordering on terror when her
husband returns, again in silence, to beat and kick Riley to insensibility. He is left,
perhaps for dead, in a heap on the floor. Rose screams I cant see, I
cant see and the curtain falls.
Has Rileys blindness transferred to Rose? Why? The supposedly
secure room with its warm fire is invaded by danger and the irrational. People appear at
random and fail to recognize each other. Rose tries to accept Riley, timidly caressing his
head as he sits at her table, until the husband enters. Then suddenly the cozy looking
kitchen harbors the threat of the unknowable. Nothing is explained; non sequiturs and
unanswered questions in the dialogue build up an atmosphere of confusion and dismay that
turns threatening and then violent. Commonplace perceptions grow unstable; the everyday
world metamorphoses into the site of nightmare.
Celebration aims for quite an opposite atmosphere. It is a
comic episode, a satirical skit, rather than a play with plot and consequence. Three
working class couples celebrating a wedding anniversary at a trendy restaurant take turns
at one-upping each other as well as toasting each others success in business.
Theyve come a long way economically and their next step, by implication, would
involve a corresponding social mobility. They show no sign of being able to make the cut;
rather it is clear they possess neither the requisite social nor linguistic skills to
maneuver their way through the British class system. In any case, Pinters point
about language as a dead give-away of background is probably clearer to British than to
American audiences, who forgive deviations from a standard set after all by media.
The couples waiter presents himself, intrusively, as a man of
similar goals; visually as well as verbally hilarious, the waiter sidles and
insinuates himself in his clients conversation. He affects a middle class background
by citing his and his grandfathers familiarity with great men of
literature and culture. In fact, he need not bother with name dropping. These people
recognize T.S. Eliot no better than he does or his grandfather either, the model he cites
as a source of intellectual accomplishment. Pinter skewers them all with their deliciously
vulgar style of dress and speech..
These couples seem desperate to enjoy themselves, displaced as they are
in a situation of their betters. Their pretense at comfort in the posh surrounding keeps
them on edge and at each others mercy. It may come as a surprise that class,
according to Celebration, remains as solid a social barrier in our time as it has
been through English history. Film since the 1950's has shown a slow but steady
deterioration of class biases. Perhaps both positions are true; social change is a slow
process. As for the actors, performances shine with an ease that comes of long
professional experience and the sure hand of director Neil Pepe.
New York, December 16, 2005 - Nina DaVinci Nichols