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Its
usually all about Orpheus. But Chicago playwright Sarah Ruhl has taken the ancient myth of
the sweet singer who braves the terrors of the underworld to rescue the girl he loves and
stood it on its ear. Eurydice, at Berkeley Rep, is the story of the girl. And,
dearly as she loves her husband, the most important man in the story and her life
just may be her dear old dad.
By inventing a father for
Eurydice, Ruhl has deepened what might be seen as just another love story into a genuine
dilemma. What really happens when a young girl leaves her fathers home for her
husband? Granted that Eurydices father (Charles Shaw Robinson), is dead, but so is
she. When Orpheus leads her slowly back up to earth, loud noises erupt and terrifying
lights flash. Eurydice is nearly paralyzed with fright and this fear becomes the heart of
the matter, the crux of the play. Does she unconsciously tempt her lover to look back at
her, violating his bargain with Hades, so that she can go home to daddy?
The underworld is no place of
smoldering fires and taunting demons here. New arrivals come by elevator. Inexplicably, it
is raining in the elevator. At first, Eurydice thinks she is in a hotel and that her
father is the bellboy. There are no rooms in deaths kingdom but her father builds
her one out of string. Among Ruhls inventions is a kind of after-death postal
service. Eurydices father writes her a letter on her wedding day, which ultimately
leads to her death (by falling downstairs, not snakebite as in the myth).
The bereft Orpheus (Daniel Talbott), who would rather compose a
symphony than write a letter, writes to her of his grief. The missives are pasted on the
wall for the wind to take or given to a passing worm, in hopes that they may reach their
mark. And they do. At first, having dipped in the river of forgetfulness, Eurydice cannot
read them or even remember the man who sent them. But the sympathetic shade of her
father helps her in this, as in all other things, and soon father and daughter are sitting
on the floor, trading words and memories as if they had never died. This is a play about
words as much as it is about love and the playwrights passion for language comes
through loud and clear.
The anti-language contingent is
represented by a trio of stones, played for laughs by Aimee Guillot, Ramiz Monsef and T.
Edward Webster. They want Eurydice and her father to speak only the soft, almost inaudible
language of the dead but the two resist. The stones act as a kind of Greek chorus,
providing comic relief to what might otherwise become a deadly serious affair. Also
humorous is Mark Zeisler, first appearing as a Nasty Interesting Man and later as the
immature, tricycle-riding Lord of the Underworld. In both guises he unsuccessfully tries
to seduce Eurydice away from her true love.
Maria Dizzia is a charming
Eurydice, in love with words, in love with books, in love with life. That she also is in
love with Orpheus, the leading musician of his time (shades of rock star infatuation)
seems almost incidental.
Master director Les Waters (Yellowman,
Big Love) has taken all these threads and
woven them into a seamless ninety minutes that elicits both laughter and tears. Played out
in modern dress (the lovers are like a couple of teenagers in the throes of their first
crush) and language, against Scott Bradleys knockout set of aquamarine tiles, the
tragic tale of death and undying love may not be as poetic as in other treatments but it
is much more interesting a word that is used a lot in the script.
Berkeley, CA, October 21, 2004 - Suzanne Weiss