World Theater, Opera, and Performance: 05/11/24

Saturday, May 11, 2024

Index of Entries (by author, composer, lyricist, choreographer, or performer)

Edward Albee | At Home at the Zoo / 2017

Edward Albee | Seascape / 2005


Leroy Anderson, Jean Kerr, Walter Kerr, and Joan Ford | "Who's Been Sitting in My Chair?" from 

     Goldilocks / 1958 


Maxwell Anderson (see Kurt Weill)


Julie Archer and Lee Breuer | Peter and Wendy, 2011


Béla Balázs (see Béla Bartók)


Béla Bartók and Béla Balázs | Bluebeard’s Castle / 2014


Amiri Baraka | The Toilet / 1964 [reading of play]


John Beasley | MONK’estra / 2018


Alban Berg | Lulu / 2015

Leonard Bernstein, Hugh Wheeler, John Cairdi, Richard Wilbur, Stephen Sondheim, John Latouche, 

     Lillian Hellman, and Dorothy Parker | Candide / 2018

Leonard Bernstein | Trouble in Tahiti / 2001

Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim | "America" from West Side Story / 1957


Thomas Bird | Bearing Witness / 2018


Georges Bizet, Ludovic Halévy and Henri Meilhac | Carmen / 2019


BODYTRAFFIC | untitled performance of September 26, 2019

BODYTRAFFIC: An Exploration of Identity Through Dance | performance of October 22, 2022


Matthew Bourne | Early Adventures / 2017

Matthew Bourne | Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake / 2019


Ethan Braun, Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer and Adam Linder (loosely based on Bernard Marie-Koltès play In 

     the Solitude of the Cotton Fields) | The Want / 2019


Bertolt Brecht (see Kurt Weill)


Lee Breuer (see Julie Archer)


Benjamin Britten and Myfanwy Piper | The Turn of the Screw / 2011


Brooklyn Rider (see Magos Herrera)


John Caird (see Leonard Bernstein)


Alexi Kaye Campbell | The Pride / 2017


Lorne Campbell (see Sting) 

Aimé Césaire | Une Saison Au Congo (A Season in the Congo) / 1967 [reading of play]


Contra-Tiempo Urban Latin Dance Theater | joyUS just US / 2020


Barbara Cook | Performance at Wallis Annenberg Center for Performing Arts / 2015


Noël Coward | Blithe Spirit / 2015


Guelfo Civinni (see Giacomo Puccini)


Lorenzo da Ponte (see Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart)


William DuBois | Haiti / 2018


Claude Debussy | Pelléas et Mélisande / 2016


Orlando di Lasso Lagrime di San Pietro (Tears of St. Peter) / 2018


Kenward Elmslie (see Claibe Richardson)


Karen Finley | The Expanded Unicorn Gratitude Mystery / 2017


William Finn and James Lapine | Falsettos / 2011


John Fleck | Blacktop Highway: A Gothic Horror Screeplay’d on One Man’s Body / 2018

Joan Ford (see Leroy Anderson)

Maria Irene Fornes | Fefu and Her Friends / 1977 [reading of play]

María Irene Fornés | Fefu and Her Friends / 2019

María Irene Fornes | Promenade / 1969 [reading of play]


Aretha Franklin (1942-2018)     


George Gershwin, DuBose Heyward, and Ira Gershwin | Porgy and Bess / 2020


Ira Gershwin (see George Gershwin)


Antonio Ghislanzoni (see Giuseppe Verdi)

Gob Squad | Creation (Pictures for Dorian) / 2018

Annie Gosfield | War of the Worlds / 2017

Winston Graham (see Nico Muhly)

Vincenzo Grimani (see George Frideric Handel)


Adam Guettel and Craig Lucas | The Light in the Piazza / 2019


Ludovic Halévy and Henri Meilhac (see Georges Bizet)


Oscar Hammerstein II (see Jerome Kern)

Oscar Hammerstein II (see Richard Rodgers)


George Frideric Handel and Vincenzo Grimani | Agrippina / 1709

George Frideric Handel and Nicola Francesco Haym | Tamerlano / 2009


Cailin Maureen Harrison | Defenders / 2019


Alfred Hayes (see Kurt Weill)


Nicola Francesco Haym (see George Frideric Handel) 


Lillian Hellman (see Leonard Bernstein)


DuBose Heyward (see George Gershwin)


Henrik Ibsen | Hedda Gabler / 2009


William Inge | Picnic / 2023


Cailin Maureen Harrison | Defenders / 2019


Magos Herrera and Brooklyn Rider quintet | untitled concert / 2019

Hotel Modern | Kamp / 2018

Maureen Huskey | The Woman Who Went to Space as a Man / 2018

Bill T. Jones | Analogy Trilogy / 2018


Tom Jones (see Harvey Schmidt)

Rajiv Joseph | Archduke / 2017

Adrienne Kennedy Funnyhouse of a Negro / 1964 [reading of play]

William Kentridge, Philip Miller, Catherine Meyburgh, and Peter Galison | Refuse the Hour / 2017

Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II | "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man of Mine," from Show Boat / 1927

Jean Kerr and Walter Kerr (see Leroy Anderson)

Pat Kinevane and Denis Clohessy | Before / 2019

Benjamin Endsley Klein and Holland Taylor | Ann / 2016

Oskar Kokoschka | Murderer, the Women’s Hope / 1907 [full play]


James Lapine (see William Finn)


John Latouche (see Leonard Bernstein)


Debby Lawlor | Freddy / 2017

Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee The Gang’s All Here / 1959 [reading of play]

Robert E. Lee (see Jerome Lawrence)

Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer (see Ethan Braun)


Adam Linder (see Ethan Braun)


Robert Lopez (see Trey Parker)


Craig Lucas (see Adam Guettel)


Taylor Mac | Hir / 2019


Audra McDonald (see Lanie Robertson)


Bernard Marie-Koltès (see Ethan Braun)


Jules Massenet and Henri Cain | Cendrillon / 2018


Murray Mednick | Mayakovsky and Stalin / 2018


Gian Carlo Menotti | The Consul / 2017

Douglas Messerli | Interview with Simone Forti/ 2020

Julia Migenes | Le Vie en Rose / 2019

Benjamin Millepied | L. A. Dance Project (performance November 2, 2017)

Arthur Miller |  A View from the Bridge / 2016

Philip Miller (see William Kentridge)


Mak Mirishita (see Tabaimo)


Meredith Monk | Atlas / 2019


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Lorenzo da Ponte | Cosí fan tutte / 2011


Nico Muhly, Nicholas Wright and Winston Graham | Marnie / 2018


David Mynne (performer) | A Christmas Carol / 2019


Jeton Neziraj | Department of Dreams / 2019


John O’Keefe | All Night Long / 2018

John O’Keefe | Reapers / 2005


Eugene O’Neill | Ah, Wilderness! / 2015

Eugene O’Neill | A Moon for the Misbegotten / 1975


Joe Orton | Loot / 2019


Eric Overmyer | Dark Rapture / 1996


Dorothy Parker (see Leonard Bernstein)


Trey Parker, Robert Lopez, and Matt Stone | The Book of Mormon / 2017


Suzan-Lori Parks | Father Comes Home from the Wars, Part I, 2 & 3 / 2016


The Harry Partch Ensemble | Partch: Windsong / 2017


Stephen Petronio | American Landscapes / 2020 (streamed live)


Harold Pinter | The Homecoming / 2008

Harold Pinter | The Room / 2016


Cole Porter | "Anything Goes" from Anything Goes / 1934


J. B. Priestley | An Inspector Calls / 2019


Giacomo Puccini, Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa | La Bohème / 2008 

Giacomo Puccini, Guelfo Civinni, and Carlo Zangarini | La funciulla del West (The Girl of the Golden West) / 2018

Hamid Rahmanian | Feathers of Fire: A Persian Epic / 2017

Vicki Ray | Rivers of Time / 2019

Claibe Richardson and Kenward Elmslie | "Chain of Love" from The Grass Harp / 1971

Jack Richardson | Gallows Humor / 1961 [reading of play]


Lanie Robertson and Audra McDonald | Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill / 2016

Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II | "Bali Ha'i" from South Pacific / 1949

Gioachino Rossini and Andrea Leone Tottola | La donna del lago / 2015

David Roussève and his dance company REALITY | Halfway to Dawn / 2018

Stephen Sachs | Arrival & Departure / 2018

Esa-Pekka Salonen (see The Weimar Republic: Germany 1918-1933 Weimar Nightfall)

Kamala Sankaram and Susan Yannowitz | Thumbprint / 2017

Robert Schenkkan | Building the Wall / 2017


Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones | “Try to Remember” from The Fantasticks / 1960


Michel Seuphor (with sets by Piet Mondrian) | The Ephemeral Is Eternal / 1982

Wallace Shawn | The Designated Mourner / 2017

Sam Shepard | Killer’s Head and The Unseen Hand

Martin Sherman | Bent / 2015


Stephen Sondheim (see Leonard Bernstein)


Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson | The Mother of Us All / 2020


Sting and Lorne Campbell | The Last Ship / 2020


Matt Stone (see Trey Parker)


Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal | Elektra / 2016

Richard Strauss and Oscar Wilde | Salome / 2008


Barbra Streisand | Barbra: The Music, The Memories, the Magic / 2017


August Strindberg | The Dance of Death / 2017


Tabaimo and Maki Morishita | Fruits Borne Out of Rust / 2020


Margaret Leng Tan | Curios and Metamorphoses (Book I) / 2018


Holland Taylor (see Benjamin Endsley Klein)


Virgil Thomson (see Gertrude Stein)


Andrea Leone Tottola (see Gioachino Rossini) 

  

Luis Valdez | Valley of the Heart / 2018


Jean-Claude van Itallie | The Serpent / 2020


Giuseppe Verdi and Antonio Ghislanzoni | Aida / 2009


Hugo von Hofmannsthal (see Richard Strauss)


Richard Wagner | Die Walküre / 2019


Enda Walsh | The Walworth Farce / 2009


Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht | Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (Rise and Fall of the City of 

     Mahagonny) / 2010

Kurt Weill and Alfred Hayes (based on the play by Maxwell Anderson) | Lost in the Stars / 1972 [TV 

      movie]


Mac Wellman | The Hyacinth Macaw / 2011


The Weimar Republic: Germany 1918-1933 Weimar Nightfall | concert conducted by Esa-Pekka 

     Salonen / 2020


Hugh Wheeler (see Leonard Bernstein)


Richard Wilbur (see Leonard Bernstein)


Oscar Wilde (see Richard Strauss)


Tennessee Williams | The Glass Menagerie / 2010


Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy) | The Two-Headed Calf / 2019

Dorian Wood | XAVELA LUX AETERNA / 2019

Nicholas Wright (see Nico Muhly)

Susan Yannowitz (see Kamala Sankaram)


Carlo Zangarini (see Giacomo Puccini) 


Henrik Ibsen | Hedda Gabler / 2009

burned up

by Douglas Messerli

 

Henrik Ibsen Hedda Gabler, adapted by Christopher Shinn / Roundabout Theatre Company, American Airlines Theatre / the production I saw was a preview on January 17, 2009

 

As New York Times critic Charles Isherwood suggested in his piece (January 18, 2009) on the upcoming production of Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler, Hedda is an "antiheroine" who inevitably draws actresses to her. She is, to put it mildly, one of the nastiest people of 1890s Norway, and one of the "meanest" (as Isherwood describes her) women in theater history.



      To start, she has just married the innocent scholar Jørgen Tesman without any love for the man (she cannot even abide his scholarly interests in domestic crafts of the Middle Ages) but for the reason, as she puts it, "I had danced myself out... My time was up"—in short, within the confining society of the time, as a woman in her late 20s she is in danger of being described as an old maid.

     Equally without purpose, she has demanded they move into a large city house, replete with expensive furniture, this despite the fact that George has not yet been offered the teaching position he hopes will help with the expenses. Rather than accommodating George and his beloved aunt, Hedda demeans both by pretending to believe the aunt's new hat—purchased especially to please Hedda—belongs to the servant, who has tossed it upon the chair. The flowers sent to honor her return from her honeymoon are trashed.

      Later it becomes clear that Hedda has had close relationships both with George's intellectual foe, the Romantic and dissipated Eilert Løvborg, and with the family's friend, Judge Brack, who has helped attain and fund their new house and belongings.

      These relationships, however, are not exactly sexual, for Hedda is what we might describe today as a sexual tease, drawing the men toward her only so that she might have control over them. The minute they cross the line, she pulls out her father's (the General's) pistols and shoots.

      Hedda might be said to represent the military way of life. Disinterested in cultural history, she uses the past only as a method of strategy, of determining how to control the men under her "command," demanding of Løvberg, as she hands him one of her pistols, death. When Judge Brack, a far cleverer opponent, wily finds a way to put her under his control, she reacts with the only response she knows, committing suicide with the remaining gun.

 

     Hedda is, quite clearly, an intense woman burning up with desire, but so afraid of losing her self- control, so determined to rule each situation, that she must destroy everything around her, including the brilliant manuscript Løvberg has just written and lost on his way home. Like the uncontrollable behavior fueling her actions, she burns his book in the stove, destroying his metaphorical "child," the only force of life and possibility in the play, and in that act, seals her own doom.

     Yet, as Isherwood and others have pointed out, this "queen of mean" must reveal some other qualities just to make her believable. We need to comprehend her beauty, her wit, her positive qualities—whatever they are—just enough to understand why the intelligent Løvberg, the slimy Brack, and the doddering academic husband all find her so necessary in their lives. For, in the end, all she has touched, all she has thought she controlled, turns to naught. Løvberg does, indeed, die, but as the result of an accidental shooting in the groin, not a bullet through the head. Brack has no real need of Hedda; for him she is simply another tool for manipulation. And "poor" Jørgen ends up happily with Mrs. Elvsted, an attractive woman who has just left her husband to help Løvberg with his writing, who now will surely find a soul mate in Tesman. Accordingly, if Hedda is only presented as a mean, hateful being, the play ends in black hole as the energies of the piece (represented by Hedda and Løvberg) collapse, leaving us with only good, empty-headed bourgeois folk. Despite her aberrations, the audience needs to have been in love with Hedda!


     Unfortunately, the preview of the production I saw in New York on January 17, 2009, offered no solution to the problem. Although Mary-Louise Parker may have been perfect as a sort of sexual gamin in previous plays such as Reckless, Prelude to a Kiss, and How I Learned to Drive, here she has little sexual warmth, mouthing Hedda's evil wit with a not-so-subtle wink and nod, slowing down the action so that, by the end of the play we feel superior to all the characters in the work. Her intense queries directed at Mrs. Elvsted, for example, seem more like an interrogation than the somewhat desperate questions of a jealous woman. Similarly, Michael Serveris' Jørgen Tesman is played as such a fool that even if Hedda feels his offer of marriage was her last chance, we, like Løvberg, cannot comprehend her decision. Rather than creating an innocent alternative to Hedda, Ana Reeder's Thea Elvsted seems an even greater simpleton than Jørgen, unable to understand the comic manipulations of Hedda concerning their shared years in school.

    Christopher Shinn's adaptation of this play, as far as I could tell upon rereading the Fjelde translation of the play a day later, eliminates any possibility that Hedda may have any good qualities, such as her determination to remain faithful to her husband. Anything that might have softened Hedda, to help us to see her as the great lady we are told she is, seems to have been obliterated. In the end, when Judge Brack reacts to Hedda's suicide, "People don't do such things!" we might almost respond: "But then Hedda isn't really a person, is she?"

 

Los Angeles, January 24, 2009

Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (January 2009).

Index of Entries (by author, composer, lyricist, choreographer, or performer)

Edward Albee | At Home at the Zoo / 2017 Edward Albee | Seascape / 2005 Leroy Anderson, Jean Kerr, Walter Kerr, and Joan Ford | "Who&#...