Honestly never before have I see a live stage production of Robert Bolt's play. The movie with Paul Scofield yes, the made for television version with Charlton Heston, again yes.
After seeing A Man For All Seasons by the Actor's Co-Op, my view is one of doubt this should be filmed. It works far, far too well as live theatre in ways all but unworkable for other media.
Topical, as well. For those who don't know, Bolt's script tells of Sir Thomas More, a prominent lawyer in Tudor England who became friends with a young King Henry VIII, then broke with him over that monarch's efforts to divorce his queen to marry Anne Boleyn. This resulted in a break with Rome, the formation of the Church of England, and generations of religious conflicts which impact British life to this day.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Also, one feels more powerfully of the play than of either film, a more powerful feel for how these all these characters remain topical because they seem real. Lacking the myopic focus of a camera, the whole story seems less a series of beautiful images and more slices of genuine life.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
A vivid image of this lies in a character we only see once, but everyone talks about--King Henry (Ian Michaels) himself. Not the overdressed whale of a man from the Holbien portraits, but the handsome and smarmy figure we soon realize has very nearly no ethics at all, just desires--including the weird desire to be seen (even by himself) as morally right. So the wheels of church and government turn and seek to destroy a man who seeks only to be left alone, because this King remains very much a bully and a child, at least emotionally.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Rounding out the cast is the Spanish Ambassador Signor Chapuys (Vito Viscuso) along with Cardinal Woolsey as well the Archbishop of Canterbury (Greg Martin)--the flawed men defending the Church, such as it is, that More feels bound by far more than honor to preserve--to a heartbreaking conclusion.
All in all, under the direction of Thom Babbes, this play portrays what Los Angeles theatre seems increasingly skilled at recreating--a very possible nightmare when the powerful lack compassion or loyalty, enslaved by desire and cowardice instead.
A Man for All Seasons plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 2:30pm until April 15, 2018 at the David Schall Theatre (part of First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood) 1760 North Gower Street. Hollyood CA 90028.
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