Friday, May 25, 2012
workaround

Donate Now tile

To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.




workaround



Triangle Park Creative

THEATER | At the Guthrie, Kneehigh Theatre's "Brief Encounter" is exuberant and heart-tugging

Milo Twomey and Hannah Yelland in Brief Encounter. Photo courtesy Kneehigh Theatre.

February 13, 2010

As we sat down for Saturday night's performance of Kneehigh Theatre's Brief Encounter at the Guthrie's McGuire Proscenium Stage, I was telling my friend Teresa that I'd always found that stage to be a space performers had to struggle to overcome—that they had to work especially hard in that space to connect with the audience. Just then, a performer walked out and stood in the aisle. Then he started playing the spoons, and how can you not feel a connection with a guy playing the spoons?

Brief Encounter isn't only the most approachable show I've ever seen on the McGuire stage, it may be the most richly human production I've seen at the Guthrie since the company moved to its riverfront home. It's gloriously theatrical, vastly entertaining, and completely captivating. The Kneehigh troupe cut through the setting's starchy formality like scrubbing bubbles, winning your heart and sparking your imagination.

Inverting the film-to-stage-to-film path taken by The Producers and Hairspray, Brief Encounter is adapted by director Emma Rice from the 1945 film that was itself adapted by Noël Coward from his 1936 play Still Life. Teresa calls the film "the perfect melodrama": a star-crossed love affair between Alec, a married man, and Laura, a married woman, parlayed into a long stretch of agonizing tension with the pair trapped between their established relationships and their heartfelt mutual passion.

noël coward's brief encounter, presented through april 3 at the guthrie theater. for tickets ($29-$65) and information, see guthrietheater.org.

Crucial to understanding why the scenario registers as tragic rather than obnoxious (if handled differently, it could inspire a sarcastic Twitter hashtag like #beautifulpeopleproblems) is a climactic exchange in which Alec argues that nothing is more important than the pair's love, to which Laura responds that in fact there are things that are more important. Laura sees the affair as a moral lapse, not just in the formal sense of breaking a commandment but in the real sense of threatening the commitment she's made to her husband and children. The question, for Laura, is whether she can bear to betray her conscience to follow her heart.

Leads Hannah Yelland and Milo Twomey are, crucially, very likeable; the fact that they appear to be fundamentally decent people is essential to the story's impact. What's most impressive—indeed, almost miraculous—about this show, though, is the way that Rice manages to preserve the raw feeling of the central love story while wrapping it tenderly in the production's additional layers.

Those additional layers are many: there's a lot going on here, and everything works. Contrasting with the leads' tortured affair are two joyful romantic pairings among the supporting characters, played by Joseph Alessi, Annette McLaughlin, Beverly Rudd, and Stuart Mcloughlin in performances that epitomize charm. With support from additional musicians, they play several Coward songs that add feeling and dimension to the story. Rice also incorporates black-and-white video elements in a manner that both pays tribute to the production's cinematic origins and harnesses the power of the big screen to wash over the audience; aptly, crashing waves are a recurring theme. Neil Murray's set, the principal element of which is a passenger bridge spanning train tracks, is relatively simple but inventively used to support and extend the production's other elements.

Brief Encounter is a virtuoso production, the kind of show that demonstrates just how rewarding theater can be and raises the bar for everyone else. Minneapolis is one of just three American stops the show is making, after winning swoons in San Francisco and New York. It's a great catch for the Guthrie, and it's well-worth going out of your way to see. Way out of your way.

Guthrie Theater

Details

Phone: 
617-377-2224
Tags:

The Twin Cities Daily Planet is an edited news source produced by professional journalists working in collaboration with citizen journalists from the local community. We publish original reported news articles, articles republished from media partners, and some content (Free Speech Zone articles, reader-submitted blog entries, comments) that is moderated but not edited. Click here for a complete description of our editorial policies. Support people-powered non-profit journalism! Volunteer, contribute news, or become a member to keep the Daily Planet in orbit.

Jay Gabler's picture
Jay Gabler

Jay Gabler (jay@tcdailyplanet.net, Twitter @JayGabler) is the Daily Planet's arts editor.

Comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

For a different take...

Even though I'm months too late, I gotta say I disagree, Mr. Gabler.

Despite clearly and highly capable performers, I found Brief Encounter cheaply theatrical, drained of the thrill the film, and empty-headed.

Physical theater tricks such as collective cast convulsions as the "train passes by," and the undulating torsos and arms as waves of what -- passion? -- pass over the stage served only to point up the lack of ideas underneath. Licking the cat's bowl? Really? Oh, for the best days of Jeune Lune, when such physicality was the material out of which a heightened aesthetic experience was crafted, rather than tied on later as a mask of baroque pleasantries to make the punters giggle and gasp. That's insulting the audience, really.

David Lean's film version begins as a study in understatement and mystery and leaves the lovers tangled in the chains of convention and morality -- pointing deftly to possible correlations with Coward's own position with respect to convention and morality (if nothing else). At the least, Knee High unfortunately flattened this hook by laying the plot points out in a smoothly progressing line, parading the self-absorbed melodrama of the characters as tragic operetta.

Where you saw a struggle between conscience and the heart, I saw dithering and navel-gazing. My companion and I felt that both the play and its constituent situations were far from romantic (in either sense). However it may appear on the page, on the stage their affair was trite, irresponsible and pathetic. The presentation of it was sooooo high school. Maybe it's just my advanced age, but c'mon: put up or shut up. Commit to one of those relationships, your spouse or your lover. Mine is not a moral quibble so much as a theatrical one. This is the drama? Grow up, young lovers. The whole thing is over. (Touch Monkeys.)

So. Given that the choice was made to do this piece, why do it this way? A waste of talent, really. Another Easily Consumable Cultural Product. Twinkies of the art world. Isn't there a more interesting purpose for theater? Virtuosic yes, but I think we could raise the bar a little higher.

Respectfully Yours,

Cranky Old Man

P.S.

I'd love to go on about whether the Blue Box is really "starchy formality" or instead something more like Consumerist Spectacle, but I've overstayed my welcome already.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br> <img> <span> <div>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may use [google_ad:ad_slot] to display Google Admanager ads within your content.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.
workaround

Free Speech Zone

The Free Speech Zone offers a space for contributions from readers, without editing by the TC Daily Planet. This is an open forum for articles that otherwise might not find a place for publication, including news articles, opinion columns, and announcements. The opinions expressed in the Free Speech Zone and Neighborhood Notes, as well as the opinions of bloggers, are their own and not necessarily the opinion of the TC Daily Planet.

Click here to see a display of Twin Cities problem reports, from potholes to neighborhood eyesores. Click here to report a problem. Have you used SeeClickFix? Have you gotten any response from city officials? Let us know - email info@tcdailyplanet.net