BEOWULF
Nathaniel Justiniano, Ava Roy & Dana Ioga-Koga |
“Smell ... Listen ... Breathe.”
And a hundred-plus “mourners” all clad in black (i.e., the
audience) leave the San Francisco Maritime Museum, heading toward the sounds of
sad, wailing saxophones, tucked in the green hills and hidden among the giant
trees with branches reaching to heaven as in prayer. Along the way of our silent, solemn trek
above the setting sun of the Bay, a woman chants morosely tucked inside a rock;
a robed man looks to the sky in fear, mouth open; and a woman in skins and
cloth pulls on a rope emanating from the earth.
And as the deep, haunting sounds of two conch shells answering each
other’s blasts harken us further, we are told, “You have come because you felt
the call, but you don’t know yet the latent horror.”
What we do know is that we are a part of another We Players,
outdoor performance, this time at Fort Mason’s Aquatic Park and Chapel and
performed in conjunction with Rova Saxophone Quartet and InkBoat (a physical
theatre and dance company). We soon
learn as we spread ashes on a grave marked by royal crown and robe that we are
here to mourn the death of the great king and hero of ancient Geatland,
Beowulf. We eventually retire to a
funeral feast in the great Mead Hall, the Fort’s Chapel ably transformed to a
community gathering spot for ancient Anglo-Saxons of a thousand years ago. There, we settle shoulder-to-shoulder on
benches to learn and relish this great man’s wondrous feats and their effects
on both the Geatish kingdom and its enemies.
The original poem Beowulf
that many of us struggled in high school to read in its Old English form relates
the cross-sea journey that Beowulf makes to save the Danes from a havoc-raising,
man-eating monster named Grendel. The
hero’s other-worldly strengths and bravery triumph as he rips first the giant
arm and later the grisly head from the demon, also killing in a boiling lake
Grendel’s raging and revenge-seeking mother.
Back home in Greitland and as king ruling over fifty years of peace, the
old man Beowulf heads out to fight an invading dragon with the help of a young
warrior, Wiglaf. The dragon is defeated,
but the hero king also finally succumbs.
The Cast of BEOWULF |
And it is at this point that the nine performers who are also co-creators pick up the story. Less narrative poem or dramatic play and more
a combination, performance piece of music, dance, mime, chant, and poetry,
their BEOWULF is structured to allow adapted
glimpses of the original poem to be recalled from a wide variety of viewpoints beyond
that of Beowulf’s -- including those of Beowulf’s warriors, the victims of
Grendel’s savage hunger, Grendel himself, and his mother.
Time and locations also mix and shift in the panoramic
telling that happens often without words and through only the vibrant visuals
performed by four actors on a raised stage between the rows of benched
audience. In the form of a cross and
with two ramped ends where actors crawl, wriggle, run, and drag themselves to
its pinnacle, the stage has at its head an alter of sorts where the great head
of the recently conquered dragon rests on high.
As various tales are recounted from different frames of
reference, saxophones, clarinets, and drums accompany in sounds more often
other-worldly than not. Staccato bursts,
squawks, and squeals; puffs of wind and waves of the sea; and growls and groans
float and fly from all directions in the mostly darkened arena with occasional
pounds and booms that seem to emit from somewhere deep within the old, wooden
walls around us. At one point, arguing
and fighting Geats leave words behind and continue their verbal battle relying
on the clicking, clacking, clucking that somehow are coming from instruments we
have always knows as melodic woodwinds. Charlie Gurke, Jon Raskin, Larry Ochs, Bruce Ackley, and Steve Adams clothed in their
own versions of early Middle Ages furs, hides, and rough robes become an
integral part of the storytelling, offering a musical score like none any of us
has likely ever heard nor will long forget.
Joining Justiniano and Iova-Koga as the
performers of dance, mime, and acting are Ava Roy and Shinichi Iova-Koga (the
latter two also serving as co-directors of this complex compilation of outdoor-indoor
scenes). Each performer displays ongoing,
intense concentration -- often as if in a trance -- as the motions of a storyline
are ever-so slowly and painstakingly enacted with each taut muscle and raised
vein playing its essential role. And
then, each and all can suddenly explode with an energy that is startling in its
power and speed as bodies whiz back and forth, roll and tumble, rise and
fall. This time a sleeping warrior being
eaten, next the extended arms of a dying monster, and then the drunken mob celebrating
victory, each actor takes on several dozen, oft-unnamed roles that combine to
relay why this king, now dead, is to be so revered and forever honored.
While many moments are to be held in awe as performed by the
talented cast, a particular ballet-like sequence by Shinichi Iova-Koga as the
injured and dying Grendel is particularly moving as his tucked toes and twisted
limbs that are bent and rounded to point in all directions make their way
slowly to his point of final demise. The
pain dripping from each bead of sweat in his slow journey to death cannot help
but remind us that even the cruelest, most hated of enemies still has elements
of humanity within him to be pitied.
Much of the evening’s magic and mysticism is created through
a lighting design by Allen Willner that allows another time, another world to
rise before us as well as helps to direct our attention to the next sequence of
related events. The properties of
Yoshinori Asai and the costumes of Maria Chenut establish the kingdom of
Geitland and its people around the year 1000, with bones, skulls, furs, and
heavy woolen fabrics playing major parts.
The downside of this joint, multi-faceted production of
BEOWULF is there is not always consistency in the flow and energy it generates
to keep its audience fully engaged and involved (as witnessed by a number of
obvious yawns around me as the evening progressed). There is also a point that the cacophonous instrumented
sounds blaring all around come close to becoming monotonous. The mostly non-narrated set of short tales
can begin to run together and seem repetitive and/or too long, even in their individual
brevity. At a total of about
two-and-a-half-hours, the total piece feels like some editing of a few
sequences might be warranted.
But with those rather minor cautions, if one comes into
BEOWULF open to something not a play but more of a multi-disciplined
performance piece, then this production by We Players, Rova Saxophone Quartet
& InkBoat is bound to fascinate and please.
And, the somber and peaceful trek up and over in the setting sun among
intense greenery above the San Francisco Bay is worth the price of the ticket
in itself.
Rating: 3 E
BEOWULF continues
through April 16 in a joint production by We Players, Rova Saxophone Quartet
& InkBoat at Aquatic Park and Fort Mason Chapel, 1100 Bay Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available at www.weplayers.org.
Photo Credits by Lauren Matley
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