Wednesday, March 26,2008
Incurable Despair
Theater Reviews
By Aisha Motlani
You’re on Earth, there’s no cure for that,” bellows Michael Corkins, playing Hamm in Milwaukee Rep’s production of Endgame. His
outburst marks one of many instances when his rich stentorian voice
erupts into violent disdain for the futility and wretchedness of human
existence.
Despite the comic patter consistent throughout the
play, this expression of despair for the irremediable suffering of
mankind clings to the characters like the fog one imagines inhabits the
world outside their decaying cocoon. Prolonged disease and decrepitude
remain within; “Outside of here it’s death.”
The Rep has
created an atmospheric prison to hold both its cast and its audience
captive for the one-act Samuel Beckett play. The circular set resembles
the interior of a metal drum, reinforcing the cyclical routines in
which the characters enact to keep loneliness and anxiety at bay. Its
reddish walls emit the sanguine glow of a rusty womb. Only four
characters inhabit the stage: the blind and crippled Hamm, his parents
and his servant Clov. Enthroned on his wheelchair, Hamm rules them all,
a shabby monarch whose voice remains his only weapon. His is the
hardest of all the roles, depending entirely on the nuances of the
actor’s voice to express both imperiousness and dejection. Corkins’
sonorous voice is eminently capable of expressing melodramatic woe. It
appears less adept at plowing the churlish depths of old age.
Laura Gordon and Torrey Hansen (distinctly resembling Compo, the aging ne’erdo-well from Britain’s Last of the Summer Wine) play
Nagg and Nell. Acting as a kind refrain to the sad, self-indulgent
melody of their son’s repetitive existence, their scant appearances
were the most diverting parts of the opening night performance. They
appear more human than Clov and Hamm, sharing a history that for the
other two appears ambiguous and unresolved, despite their enduring
bondage.
Lee Ernst is well cast as Clov. The play begins with
him pushing back the curtain, circuiting the stage with his slow and
stunt- ed steps. Actors playing Beckett’s ungainly Clovs and Estragons
are placed in a precarious position between comic and tragic. Ernst
walks the tightrope with competence. His every gesture punctuates his
fatigue and hopelessness, moving the audience to rapturous laughter on
opening night yet leaving me curiously unmoved. Perhaps that was
Beckett’s desired effect for this well-worn humor: “It’s like the funny
story we have heard too often: We still find it funny, but we don’t
laugh anymore.”
Share
- Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
..Search Shepherd Express
The Original & Only All Reader Voted "Best Of"
Free Classifieds
Win Brew Fest Tickets
..Search Shepherd Express