Zachary Quinto, Cherry Jones, and Celia Keenan-Bolger in The Glass Menagerie (All photos by Michael J. Lutch) |
The audience stood and cheered at the end of the performance I attended of The Glass Menagerie at Cambridge’s American Repertory Theater, and a few weeks later Ben Brantley in The New York Times made it sound like one for the ages. I wish I could echo that proclamation of greatness and the sentiments expressed in that ovation. This production of Tennessee Williams’ beloved play, directed by John Tiffany (represented on Broadway last season by Once, which began at A.R.T.), is performed with tremendous fervency by the four-person cast – Cherry Jones as Amanda, Zachary Quinto and Celia Keenan-Bolger as her children, Tom and Laura, and Brian J. Smith as the Gentleman Caller. Nico Muhly has supplied lovely incidental piano music, Natasha Katz’s lighting is gorgeous, and the non-realist set design by Bob Crowley (who also did the costumes) is lyrical and evocative. An abstracted pyramid of scaffolding stands in for the fire escape attached to the Wingfields’ Depression-era St. Louis apartment, and a reflecting pool with a quarter-moon dipped in it provides a downstage frame for the action. I have no idea what that pool is supposed to signify (Brantley’s explanation, that it’s “the abyss of being lost,” doesn’t make sense to me in terms of the text, and it isn’t even good English), but every now and then one or another of the characters wanders to the edge and sways toward it, as if in danger of tumbling in. That’s one example of the movement provided by Steven Hoggett, who collaborated with Tiffany on Once as well. I loved the strangeness of the movement in Once, but it was really choreography; here it intrudes on the play, and the actors are so obviously not dancers that it feels awkward, even occasionally embarrassing. I felt the same way about some of the staging, too, like the way Laura enters at the top of the play and exits at the end through the back of the living-room couch, and the miming of the meals. It’s OK, I guess, that Tiffany wants to do without silverware, but it’s absurd to imagine Tom would eat with his fingers or lick up the last traces of food on his plate. This is nonsense of a specifically A.R.T. brand. And it’s less forgivable that there’s so little on stage in the way of furniture and props that we don’t get to see the photograph of the absent Mr. Wingfield that Tom repeatedly draws our attention to, or that all we’re shown of Laura’s titular glass collection is a single figure.
Cherry Jones as Amanda and Celia Keenan-Bolger as Laura |
But if Laura can’t be the protagonist, she’s eminently playable, and Celia
Keenan-Bolger, recently the female star of Peter and the Starcatcher on
Broadway, joins the list of terrific actresses who have put their stamp on the
role. (Here are some others: Karen Allen in Paul Newman’s 1987 film, who triumphs
over essential miscasting – she’s too pretty; Calista Flockhart in the
Roundabout’s 1994 version; and Jenny Bacon at Williamstown. Bacon showed up in
two luminous scenes in an episode of Law
and Order: Special Victims Unit about
a month ago as the widow of a murder victim whose homosexuality she had learned
to accept out of love, and I was reminded of how marvelous she had been as
Laura a decade and a half ago.) Keenan-Bolger holds her thin arms stiffly at
her sides and her feet together in a “V” and her head is tipped forward
slightly like a bird perched to peck for food. When she learns that Jim has a
fiancĂ©e, she seems to shrivel, but when Jones’s Amanda, blindsided by the news,
blurts out politely that she wishes him well and invites Laura to echo her,
Keenan-Bolger looks him straight in the eye and makes her affirmation a
generous concession.
Brian J. Smith and Zachary Quinto |
On Broadway last season Brian J. Smith had a couple of memorable scenes as
the Russian stud who seduces John Lithgow in The
Columnist, but like Quinto he tries too hard in this production. His
rhythms are weird: he hits a key word or two and lets the rest of each sentence
drift away, and his volume is as inconsistent as the signal on an old radio. He
does have a fine moment of misty-eyed excitement, though, when Laura digs out
the school yearbook packed with mementoes of Jim’s high-school
triumphs. It may seem perverse to argue with The Glass Menagerie, especially since
it’s obvious why so many people think it’s a great American play. Perhaps I
would share that assessment if I saw a production that made it work without
doing what Keller did at Williamstown, which was essentially to shift its focus
and alter its meaning. I’ve changed my views on two of Williams’s plays through
the years – The Night of the Iguana and Suddenly,
Last Summer – because
gifted directors and actors have scraped off the stubborn, discolored remnants
of years of misbegotten productions and revealed the treasures underneath. And
sometimes I think that if I could time-travel back to see the way others were
done originally I’d gain a fresh understanding of them. The three-minute
segment of Elia Kazan’s 1955 mounting of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof that surfaces in Broadway’s Golden Age, with Ben
Gazzara and Barbara Bel Geddes, is glorious in a way that none of the many
editions I’ve seen even approaches; it suggests that underneath the intractable
warhorse that gets hauled out for a new production every couple of
seasons (there’s one on Broadway now, with Scarlett Johansson) is a play that
would knock you on your ass if you could only see it done right. And Eddie
Dowling’s 1945 Menagerie, they
say, was enchanting from start to finish. Perhaps it really was, but once again
this latest production leaves me cold.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished
Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts,
where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and The
Boston Phoenix and is the author of three books: Method
Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No
Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in
American Movies.
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