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| Berkeley, Aurora Theatre Company November 12 - December 19, 2004 |
Manners,
marriage, money and mobility (social and in an upward direction)--thats what a Jane
Austen novel is made of. And, although some two centuries have passed since she
surreptitiously scribbled her books under the guise of reading at her desk, not much has
changed (except maybe our manners or lack thereof). She only wrote six books, two of which
were published posthumously, and has achieved more fame in the past ten years than she
ever did in her lifetime. Austen died in 1817 at the age of 42.
Although admired by such notables
as Sir Walter Scott, Disraeli and Virginia Woolf, Jane Austen achieved her current
blockbuster status only recently through movies and television. First came Ang
Lees highly-touted Sense
and Sensibility, starring Emma Thompson and Hugh Grant, not yet fallen from
grace. But the 1996 BBC version of Pride
and Prejudice, later broadcast in this country on A&E, with the hunky,
brooding Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy, was the rocket that catapulted Austen to rock star
status. That same year, emerging superstar Alicia Silverstone played an updated version of
Emma in the hit movie Clueless.
A year later, already-arrived superstar Gwyneth Paltrow played Emma
straight up.
Emma is unique among Austens
genteel heroines in that she is seriously flawed. A spunky lass, from a moderately
privileged household, she has a decidedly high opinion of herself and is a determined
matchmaker, meddling shamelessly in the lives of others with little or no insight into her
own. Yet, she has an undeniable charm. British playwright Michael Fry has brought an
adaptation of the novel to the stage and, as presented at the intimate Aurora Theatre in
Berkeley, Emmas charm is transmitted very well.
Frys conceit, framing
Austens tale in a fairly modern setting where five young people decide to stage the
story in an attic on a rainy afternoon, allows a handful of actors to play thirteen
different characters, changing in an instant with the aid of wigs and shawls and walking
sticks. A wine glass serves as an ear-trumpet and, when there arent enough actors to
go around, someone drapes a boa around a dress form or puts a hat on a mop to swell the
scene. This, in itself, lends humor to the already-amusing plot.
When one of the players overacts
shamelessly as does David Mendelsohn as three suitors, the prissy cleric Elton, the
hayseed farmer Martin and the dashing cavalier, Frank Churchill one is reminded
that these are kids, putting on a play. Lindsay Benner, elegant as Emmas friend and
former governess Mrs. Weston and the mysterious Jane Fairfax, hams it up as Emmas
father. Kathleen Dobbs brings just the right touch of garrulous hysteria to the spinster
Miss Bates and the snobbish Mrs. Elton but simpers as Harriet, the object of Emmas
ceaseless matchmaking aims. Only two of the actors play it fairly straight and they are
superbly cast. Lauren Grace is a perfect Emma and Joe Wyka a Mr. Knightley, deserving of
the name. The penultimate scene when Knightley, the old friend-turned suitor, confesses
his love for Emma, is mesmerizing. The cluttered attic and all its silliness fades away in
the candlelit glow of two people in love.
Jeffrey Bihr both directed and composed the incidental music for the show and J.B.
Wilson designed the appropriately messy set. Costumes, mostly thrown on over the
players-within-a plays street clothes, are by Cassandra Carpenter. Its a
little choppy in parts but mostly it works. Had Jane Austen been in the audience, she
would have been quietly pleased, in an appropriately genteel way.
Berkeley, CA, November 19, 2004 - Suzanne Weiss