
"Let's start with a
single, simple word,
Power ... I don't know of a better (play) of its genre since The
Glass Menagerie..." The New York Post
Our second production of the 1997-1998 presented a modern American
Classic. Written in 1970, the play had a very successful run
Off-Broadway. The following year it was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and
the Drama Critics' Circle Award for best play of the 1970-71 season.
Melvin Bernhardt who directed the play in London as well as Broadway
received an Obie for
Distinguished
Direction. The play was certainly a deviation from our normal
productions but the winter slot is one where, traditionally, risks are
taken and this was no exception. Stephanie and Angus Hepburn
switched hats for this one with Stephanie playing the lead in the
production and Angus directing. The text we used was a compilation of
the American and English versions.
The play is set in an old
vegetable and fruit shop that has long since gone out of business under
the relentless onslaught of quick-frozen vegetables and the ubiquitous
supermarket. It is
inhabited by Beatrice (Stephanie Hepburn), the daughter of the original
owner, and her two daughters Ruth (Leah Shankman) with her fantasies of
sexiness and fashion, who has long since been driven to epileptic fits,
and Matilda (Samantha Sklaar) who survives by withdrawing into a world
she has found in the simplicity and beauty of science ... the atom from
which we are all built and to which we will all dissolve.
The play, possibly because of its television
background, is episodic in nature with scenes showing key times between
the planting of the marigolds and their presentation at the school
Science Fair.
The problem comes in trying to maintain the continuity of the scenes,
distinguishing between them while maintaining the continuity of the
whole. We overcame this problem by using live music to link across the
transitions coupled with a light change to pale low-level blue light (a
dream stage) while the members of the cast did any set changing that
was necessary, never really stepping out of character. The pianist
(Robert Vitale) was located on stage (upstage right) and watched the
action along with the audience. All the music was improvised around
Satie's Trois Gymnopedie using major and minor
sections as themes depending on the mood of the particular transition
and to comment on the action.
The production was a welcome return to the stage for Stephanie, the
Company's Artistic Director, in one of the strongest female roles in
American contemporary theatre. PRT's Children's acting classes led us
to the two younger members of the cast. Samantha Sklaar provided us
with a wonderful Tillie and completely won the hearts of the audience.
Hannah Friedman played the thoroughly nasty Janice (she of the cat
skeleton) and took great delight in describing the "boiling"!
Ruth was played by a newcomer to PRT, Leah Shankman, a graduate of
Barnard College. She had worked extensively in New York and trained at
the the Lee Strasberg Institute. The silent but omnipresent Nanny saw a
welcome return to PRT by Jane Reibel who had last appeared with us in The
Good Doctor. Last, but not least, we must not forget our
youngest cast member - Pookie, the Sklaar's pet rabbit who played Peter
with great professionalism! He was also our youngest cast member ever
since he was only a few months old when he made his debut on the
Paramount stage!
On the production side, Angus Hepburn directed for the first time for
PRT although had directed before in Edinburgh. The Vitales were well
represented in the show for while Robert played piano, Stephanie stage
managed for us ably assisted by Robert Shubin, fresh from his role as
the Russian Officer in Arms and the Man. As always,
Lights and sound were run for us by Curtis St. John and the Paramount
staff.
The Effect of Gamma Rays
On Man-In-The-Moon Marigolds
by Paul Zindel
directed by Angus Hepburn
Cast in order of appearance
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