The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Back in the acts

A year in Maine theater
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  December 20, 2006

061222_inside_theater
PENETRATING: Equus at USM.

When it comes to dramatics, there’s plenty to toast at this year’s end. Artistic directors of the established houses chose some excellent scripts — some classics, some brand-new — and 2006 also saw fine contributions from outside the mainstream, including experimental, civically-minded, and traveling shows. Here follows a compilation of some of the year’s theatrics that I recall with particular relish:

Two of this year’s most elegant, witty, and smartly produced plays both happen to have been put up by the THEATER PROJECT, and both were classic comedies: Coward’s Blithe Spirit and Shaw’s Arms and the Man. In the former, Elizabeth Chambers was ravishing as a petulant ghoul, and both plays featured Mark Honan in satisfyingly jocular roles.

Sucker that I am for the modern classics, I swooned for the MAD HORSE production of Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. David Currier and the venerable Peter Brown made it a rightfully spooky and hilarious comic romp through Hamletland, doing great justice to the great playwright’s verbal virtuosity.

A newer existential buddy play, Michael Kimball’s Best Enemies, got its world premiere this fall at THE PLAYERS’ RING, starring Michael Crockett and Christopher Savage. Stranded on a desert island with no set and only two props, the two men bicker, commune, and establish a civil code, all the while committing such ingenious trespasses as “crimes against geography.” 
 
If that seems minimalist, recall PORTLAND STAGE COMPANY’S astonishing one-man, 30-plus-character show, I Am My Own Wife. In it, one magnificent actor — Tom Ford — portrayed not only Charlotte, a German transvestite antiques collector who managed to run an underground bar through the years of Nazi rule, but also scores of others — relatives, SS agents, and other gay bon-vivants, not to mention the author himself (Doug Wright), who met Charlotte in the ’90s. The story of the cross-dresser’s very singular life was a surprisingly exquisite and haunting exploration of how to document memory.

Another theatrical venture into memory and identity concerned itself less with narrative than lyricism, and was billed as Living History. Experimental and collaborative, Jennie Hahn’s art installation in the NEAL STREET GARAGE was inhabited this fall by three actors and their self-created dramatizations of just how remembrance behaves.

The Neal Street Garage has hosted a number of other events beyond the theatrical mainstream. This spring, the multi-use arts space behind the Congress Street Gulf station welcomed Escape Velocity, a gala gallery show and original performance of raw skits and music created by the YOUTH OF THE PREBLE STREET YOUTH CENTER, with help from ROIL.

Two other civically urgent efforts of 2006 deserve mention here. The first was a two-man traveling show meant to spur public discussion of the only thing as inevitable as death. Writer/performer David Greenham and performer Dennis Price took Taxing Maine on the road all over the state throughout the fall, on commission from the MAINE HUMANITIES COUNCIL, in advance of Mainers’ vote on TABOR. After the performance I attended in Biddeford, citizens of several walks of life could be seen engaging in civic discourse just as well as people in a Frank Capra film.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Theatrical progress, A smooth course, Not horsing around, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Entertainment, Health and Fitness, Daryl Lindstrom,  More more >
| More

[ 02/18 ]   "48 Hour Music Festival 4"  @ SPACE Gallery
[ 02/18 ]   Inspectah Deck + Colt Seavers  @ Port City Music Hall
[ 02/18 ]   Jeff Beam + Tanner Smith + John Nels  @ The Hive
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   PORTLAND STAGE GOES NOIR  |  February 15, 2012
    Dead guys, mysterious dames, mobsters, dirty cops, and a handsome array of handguns are all in a night's work for Philip Marlowe, novelist Raymond Chandler's quintessential LA private eye.
  •   FEMALE POETS STEP UP TO THE MIC  |  February 08, 2012
    While down in Cambridge last August with a team of Portland poets for the semi-finals of the National Poetry Slam, Tricia Henley Pryce says, she never saw more than one woman up on stage at a time.
  •   MAD HORSE’S BECKY SHAW PEERS BEHIND THE LOVE CURTAIN  |  February 08, 2012
    Three months after her father's death, the two people closest to thirty-something Suzanna (Elizabeth Chambers) don't have a lot of patience for her grief, which has her reduced to a weeping mess watching bad TV under a blanket.
  •   GOOD THEATER WRESTLES WITH LOVE AND SIN  |  February 01, 2012
    There's only one major problem in the love between Adam (Rob Cameron), a sarcastic would-be teacher working in retail, and Luke (Joe Bearor), an aspiring young actor.
  •   PUBLIC THEATER TRIES TO SAVE DISAPPEARING COMMUNICATION  |  February 01, 2012
    George (James Hoban) has a knack for languages: He's a polyglot, can lovingly conjugate all tenses of even Esperanto, and has dedicated his life to preserving tongues on the brink of extinction.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group