I had a teacher back at the National Shakespeare Conservatory who viewed only two playwrights in the 19th century as "giants." One was Norway's Henrik Ibsen, author of Ghosts which Tony Tanner has now 'adapted' into a somewhat streamlined version, titled Give Me the Sun.
The original proved deeply controversial in its day. The notion of even mentioning venereal disease in polite society shocked and disturbed audiences over a century ago. What Tanner does in this version is not so much recreate the same feeling as tweak it in ways making the story more interesting to a modern audience. Social commentary focuses more upon dishonesty, upon keeping up appearances at the expense of happiness. Ibsen's original built upon a squeamishness no longer nearly so extreme or common. Instead Tanner shifts focus upon hypocrisy, upon willful stupidity and the habit of conformity.
Honestly the total effect--in terms of the script--proves less shocking, less powerful but more engaging.
Tanner also directed this production, and here there's a delightful level of just raw, pure competence. Everyone dove into their roles with skill, so that even the weakest of them still did a fine job--and best of them enthralled.
Credit: Deborah Brosseau |
Credit: Deborah Brosseau |
And in that courage, there is greatness. In its absence the tragedy. Helene, once the slave of conformity, can now look at the prospect of her son perhaps wedding his illegitimate half-sister and thinking only "Will they be happy?" She finds in herself forgiveness to her late husband, realizing the fierceness of his heart turned in on itself by that conformity. Faced with what for any parent must be the worst terror--the doom of her child--she smothers tears and stands straight when she clearly longs to flee. Just as her son, desperate in the face of horror, proceeds with a brave resolve, accepting the sort of truths good pastor Manders would forever refuse to see.
So instead of a searing indictment of moral cowardice involving one specific issue, we get a more rounded examination with less focus but more compassion. Less of of an accusation, more of a sad tale with failed heroes rather than any real villains. One that touches our hearts more, while stirring up one's bile less.
Give Me the Sun plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm and Sundays at 2pm until October 7, 2018 at the Lounge Theatre, 6201 Santa Monica Blvd. (one block east of Vine), Hollywood, CA 90038.
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