The cast of Douglas McGrath's adaptation of The Age of Innocence (Photo: T. Charles Erickson). |
I returned to Edith Wharton’s 1920 novel The Age of Innocence before seeing Douglas McGrath’s stage adaptation, the latest collaboration between Hartford Stage and the McCarter Theatre Center, currently playing a run in the former space. It’s a diverting read but it’s never been one of my favorites. Wharton retraces Henry James’s steps and, coming seventeen years after The Ambassadors, her book feels shallow and a little obvious. In The Ambassadors the characters’ motivations are concealed behind exquisite screens that keep shifting, and you have to catch those motivations during the shifts, through the minute shafts of light that vanish moments later; his feat is to raise our stake in discovering the truth of these human interactions so high that the epiphany at the end, which is devastating for the hero, Strether, is devastating for us as well. Wharton also builds her novel around a blind American, half-stiffened by his upbringing, who is seduced and altered by the whiff of European exoticism and mystique, in the form of Ellen Olenska, an émigré New Yorker who returns home on the lam from a disastrous marriage to a count. But Wharton spells everything out for us. And her protagonist Newland Archer, who is about to marry the Countess Olenska’s cousin May Welland, doesn’t synthesize our own conflicted feelings, the way Strether does; he comes across as a boob. When Ellen falls in love with him, you wonder what on earth she could see in him.
McGrath’s
theatrical adaptation of the novel, staged with elegant authority by Doug
Hughes on an enormous set by John Lee Beatty that looks like a beautiful
burnished cage (Ben Stanton’s lighting enhances its splendor), fares much
better. Partly that’s a result of McGrath’s decision to play so much of it,
especially the first half, as a high comedy – not surprising in the
writer-director of the 1996 movie version of Jane Austen’s Emma. Mostly, though, the
play’s success hinges on McGrath’s borrowing a wonderful idea that was last
used, I believe, in Richard Nelson and Ricky Ian Gordon’s musical My Life with Albertine, based on the
Albertine sections of Proust’s Remembrance
of Things Past. He provides a narrator - the grown-up Newland – who casts a
melancholy, half-nostalgic, half-embarrassed glance backward at the follies of
his youth as his twenty-something counterpart (played with rather sweet
earnestness by Andrew Veenstra) acts them out; Hughes has even staged the two
men so the Old Gentleman, as he’s called in the playbill, often replicates the
movements of his younger self. The addition of this character lends a tender
fondness to young Archer’s interactions with both Ellen (Sierra Boggess) and
May (Helen Cespedes); we can’t get impatient with his callowness when, at a
remove of probably four decades, the older version of him is presenting him with
all his blemishes. The pièce de
résistance is that the Old Gentleman is played by Boyd Gaines, in a
poignant, rueful performance that is the finest work I’ve ever seen from him.
Gaines seems to wear tiny shards of his shattered heart in the creases of his
face, and his line readings poeticize the unassailable thieveries of time.
Boyd Gaines (back), Sierra Voggess, and Andrew Veenstra in The Age of Innocence. (Photo: T. Charles Erickson) |
Boggess
is fine as far as she takes Ellen, but she’s chosen not to make the character
especially exotic, which I think is unfortunate; it would underscore the dozens
of small ways in which she is distinctive from the New Yorkers. (You might
think of Nora Grégor as Christine de la Cheyniest in The Rules of the Game, whose house guests are always commenting on
her foreignness.) On the other hand, Cespedes deepens the character of May
Welland by giving her conventionality and expertly trained domesticity – she
and Newland marry in the middle of the narrative – a touch of desperation that
her tremendous charm never quite covers up. The supporting cast is effective
across the board, with a few memorable glints of personality among them. Darrie
Lawrence makes Mrs. Manson Miggatt, May and Ellen’s shared grandmother, both
funny and warm. Haviland Morris has one perfectly calibrated scene as Newland’s
mother, who has a genius for taking the temperature of New York high society
and working out how to bring it up or down. Tony Ward plays Archer’s senior law
partner, Mr. Letterblair, who comes across as considerably wiser and more in
command in the play than he does in the book. And I liked Josh Salt as both the
French secretary M. Rivière and, at the end, Newland’s son Dallas, whom we meet
when he’s the age his father was when the Countess Olenska came unexpectedly
into his life.
The
play doesn’t have an intermission, and it could use one (and there are two or
three moments that seem like good places to pause the action); at an hour and
forty-five minutes without a break, the perambulations of the story become a
little wearying, especially once the tone shifts away from high-comic to
something more self-serious. And there’s a mistake that may be the consequence
of budgetary restrictions but is a mistake nonetheless: though Linda Cho’s
gowns are exquisite, especially May’s, the actresses don’t get more than one
apiece. You can’t really get away with that in a realist play set among characters
who go to the opera to be seen and even occasionally remark on their own choice
of clothes. But both the adaptation and the production display a good deal of
intelligence and wit, and I would gladly sit through it again just to hear what
Boyd Gaines does with his lines.
– 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 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment