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Lazzi: The Comic Routines of the Commedia Dell'Arte The Triumph of Pierrot: The Commedia Dell'Arte and the Modern
Imagination |
A prophecy: If you jump on The Green Bird and try to ride
it with your everyday prosaic intellect, it may throw you off. But, if you sit back and
let it fly along on its own terms, it will lift you and carry you as lightly as a feather
on its wing.
Carlo Gozzis 18th century fairy tale is full of such
prophecies, although the one above is the reviewers own. It also is full of
illusion, foolery and enough special effects to satisfy the most Star Wars-hardened
theatergoer.
The prolific Venetian playwright (The Love of Three Oranges, Turandot,
The King Stag) is enjoying a renaissance in our time. But the edition of The
Green Bird currently playing at Berkeley Repertory Theatre is not the one Julie
Taymor staged on Broadway earlier this year. A collaboration with the Minneapolis-based
Theatre de la Jeune Lune, it is its own mixture of Kabuki and commedia dellarte,
spiced up with contemporary references and slang. (Berkeley theatergoers will have a
chance to experience the Taymor take on Gozzi when The King Stag comes to
Zellerbach Hall under the aegis of Cal Performances in March of next year).
The Green Bird is a merry little tale with a moral or two. Greed has
its price; be careful of what you ask for (you just might get it) and, of course, love
conquers all. In the telling there's a genuine Talking Head (Robert Ernst), the life-sized
bird of the title (a graceful Michael Edo Keane) who really is an enchanted prince, a
giant snake that would do credit to a Wagner opera, a power-hungry poet, and a very wicked
queen (Brian Baumgartner in glorious drag).
Then there are the twins, supposedly murdered at birth by their jealous
grandmother but secretly saved and raised by a lowly sausage-stuffer and his wife.
Representing reality and wonderfully played by Sarah Agnew and the always-reliable Geoff
Hoyle, the latter pair is the best of the bunch. Though the twins, the prissy Renzo
(Stephen Cartmell) and Barbarina (Stacy Ross) do their bit to liven up the proceedings.
Ross, especially, is a riot as she trades the pursuit of wisdom for the pursuit of riches,
swapping her rags for a snakeskin bikini ("Donatella, eat your heart out!") and
calling plaintively for a latte when the going gets rough.
Once they set out on their quest for fame, fortune, love and their real
mom and dad, the twins reject their foster parents, then hire them back again as servants.
Thank goodness, because when the plot bogs down, you can always count on Agnew and Hoyle
to lift it up again.
Most of the bogging happens at the hands of Dominique Serrand, who
plays the poet, a court toady who would do almost anything to further his goals. This is a
little strange because Serrand is both the director of The Green Bird and the
designer of its wonderfully imaginative scenery. Perhaps he should have left the acting to
someone else and concentrated his prodigious talents where they really count.
His set design, a giant sandbox behind which are metal sliding panels
which open and close on vistas of palaces and living statues, is a marvel, beautifully
matched by Marcus Dillards dramatic lighting and the lush, witty costumes of Sonya
Berlovitz. Composer Eric Jensen, seated above all the action, provides appropriate
mostly percussive musical accompaniment.
The Green Bird seems over-long at two-and-a-half hours. Some
of the comic shtick (but not Hoyles please) might be cut to advantage.
This magical fantasy would be ideal for children, were it not for
the four-letter words, bare body parts and sexual references that crop up from time to
time. Although a legitimate part of the commedia tradition, the bawdiness often seems
gratuitous - although one matchless line uttered by a former statue right near the end is
worth waiting for. As it is, youd better leave the kids at home. This is something
of an "R" rated show.
Oh well. We grownups could use a little magic in our lives once in a
while and a healthy dose of it flies in on the wings of The Green Bird.
Reviewed in Berkeley, September 20, 2000 - Suzanne Weiss