JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Friday, March 14, 2025

Shakespeare that resonates

by

20130511

William Shake­speare's tragi­come­dies are strik­ing res­o­nant chords with lo­cal drama­tists in this pre-CXC sea­son. The Trinidad The­atre Work­shop's (TTW) pro­duc­tion of A Mid­sum­mer Night's Dream was no ex­cep­tion dur­ing its run at the TTW base in Bel­mont.

The pro­duc­tion fol­lowed on the heels of Deb­o­rah Jean-Bap­tiste-Samuel's re­cent adap­ta­tion of Oth­el­lo and the Uni­ver­si­ty of Trinidad and To­ba­go's (UTT) pro­duc­tion of As You Like It–the for­mer of ar­guable comedic but un­doubt­ed val­ue as dark tragedy. Young thes­pi­ans at St Joseph's Con­vent, St Joseph, al­so had an en­ter­tain­ing go at A Mid­sum­mer Night's Dream two weeks be­fore.

The ex­perts may choose to de­bate the tech­ni­cal des­ig­na­tions, but TTW's Tim­mia Hearn Feld­man's ex­pert in­ter­pre­ta­tion of A Mid­sum­mer Night's Dream re­minds us, through the words of the Duke of Athens, The­seus, of the "very trag­i­cal mirth" of mis­guid­ed in­fat­u­a­tion and be­tray­al, the nar­ra­tive of which is wound through the play's three care­ful­ly and elab­o­rate­ly-plait­ed plots.

Much would not have been lost on a knowl­edge­able TTW au­di­ence, how­ev­er dense and some­times in­ac­ces­si­ble the po­et­ic di­a­logue. But Hearn Feld­man's use of lo­cal Car­ni­val char­ac­ters to rep­re­sent the spir­its of Eliz­a­bethan woods at­tempts to ex­tract from the con­flicts of the nether­world greater mean­ing in the con­text of a T&T of years past and present. It works.

Mu­si­cian Nick­o­lai Sal­cedo is par­tic­u­lar­ly con­vinc­ing as The­seus and then the con­niv­ing Oberon, king of the fairies, who gets his jester, Puck (Kearn Samuel), to ad­min­is­ter the nec­tar of a mag­ic flower to the eyes of Oberon's can­tan­ker­ous wife, Ti­ta­nia (Afi Ford-Hop­son), who then falls in love with the low­ly Nick Bot­tom, al­so played by Samuel, who wears the head of a don­key.

The mag­ic flower is al­so un­wit­ting­ly used to tem­porar­i­ly de­rail a de­vel­op­ing ro­mance be­tween Her­mia (Tis­han­na Williams) and Lysander (Arnold Goind­han) when Oberon in­structs Puck to use the mag­ic charm on Demetrius (Sol­er Phillips) who has been spurn­ing the ad­vances of He­le­na (Sindy Nurse). The flower is er­ro­neous­ly passed over the eyes of Lysander who now falls in love with He­le­na. The en­su­ing con­fu­sion flows like a Ray­mond Choo Kong farce on steroids. Ex­cept, this is Shake­speare and this is TTW.

The criss-cross­ing of in­ter­re­lat­ed sto­ries moves smooth­ly along but must have been a di­rec­tor's night­mare in the face of a small Bel­mont fa­cil­i­ty, whose dra­mat­ic si­lence is some­times bro­ken by pass­ing ve­hi­cles with 12-inch woofers.Hearn Feld­man be­lieves the play's in­ter­lock­ing sto­ries "are deeply re­lat­able to us in con­tem­po­rary T&T". But, to her cred­it, the con­nec­tions are man­aged with sub­tle­ty and are not over­ly con­trived in the ac­tion of the play, which flows vir­tu­al­ly flaw­less­ly for close to two hours.

Much of this re­sults from the work of a fine cast, which in­cludes the ex­pe­ri­enced Goind­han, who moves seam­less­ly from roles as Lysander, Cob­web and one Pe­ter Quince, who leads a rag-tag band of labour­ers/ac­tors prepar­ing for a per­for­mance at the wed­ding of The­seus and Hip­poly­ta.There's al­so Samuel, who plays four char­ac­ters–Puck, Egeus (Her­mia's fa­ther), Bot­tom, and Philostrate (chief or­gan­is­er of fes­ti­vals). He is seen by the au­di­ence be­fore, since he makes him­self avail­able for a some­what amus­ing pre-show stare-down at the TTW front door.The tal­ent­ed Tis­han­na Williams is as­signed theroles of Her­mia, Peas­blos­som and an in­ept Fran­cis Flute, who gets his lines scan­dalous­ly wrong when it's fi­nal­ly time to per­form at the wed­ding cer­e­mo­ny. Williams' ver­sa­til­i­ty as an ac­tress is tak­en to the lim­it through Her­mia's elab­o­rate lines as a lovesick young woman to the fairy world of Peas­blos­som to the slap­stick ter­rain of Fran­cis Flute who, in turn, plays the lovesick This­be in a fun­ni­ly-bun­gled per­for­mance be­fore The­seus and his bride.

The mul­ti-tal­ent­ed Williams is an amaz­ing young tal­ent with a great role to play in the fu­ture de­vel­op­ment of T&T the­atre. She is al­so an ac­com­plished vo­cal­ist with ex­pe­ri­ence in di­rect­ing as well.Then there is ac­tress/mod­el Sindy Nurse, with sol­id per­for­mances as He­le­na, Moth and Snug. As He­le­na, she plays sec­ond fid­dle to the more favoured Her­mia as far as Lysander's at­ten­tion goes, but her lines are among the more poignant in the ear­li­er parts of the play: "Hap­py is Her­mia/where­soe'er she lies;/For she hath blessed and at­trac­tive eyes./How came her eyes so bright? Not with salt tears:/If so, my eyes are of­ten­er wash'd than hers./No, no, I am as ug­ly as a bear;/For beasts that meet me run away for fear..."Afi Ford-Hop­son plays Hip­poly­ta and Ti­ta­nia with en­thu­si­asm and cre­ativ­i­ty. Sol­er Phillips gen­er­ates some of the hearti­est laughs from the au­di­ence with his por­tray­al of the in­ept Tom Snout, one of the labour­ers/drama­tists per­form­ing at the wed­ding cer­e­mo­ny.

This is qual­i­ty the­atre un­der less than sat­is­fac­to­ry con­di­tions, though. On an­oth­er oc­ca­sion, the case will be made for a bet­ter deal for one of the coun­try's most durable, pre­mier the­atre com­pa­nies with a his­to­ry go­ing back to the heady days of 1959 and a dream that No­bel lau­re­ate Derek Wal­cott shared with leg­endary per­son­al­i­ties such as the late Beryl Mc Burnie and Er­rol Jones, Fred Hope and Eu­nice Al­leyne.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored