Isaac’s Eye
Lucas Hnath
Robin Gabrielli, Adam Niemann, Jeunée Simon & Gabriel A. Ross |
Walking out of a bioplay, audience members today are often
immediately asking Google, “Did such and such really happen or not?” Lucas Hnath has solved that problem for us in
his play, Isaac’s Eye, about the
early, pre-fame life of Sir Isaac Newton. During the course of the play, as
20-something Isaac and others posit various claims as facts, an observing (and
often commenting with full smirk and smile) “Actor” writes the fact, quote,
name, or anecdote on one of three, large whiteboards engulfing the stage if and
only if the said items are actually true. In this way, we as audience know that Isaac
was in fact white-haired in his twenties (even though on stage he clearly has
dark hair), smashed in a kid’s face as a schoolboy, lived during the 1665-66
English plague, and actually did the experiment we are at one point witnessing
(with queasy stomachs) that involves a darning needle and his eye. With a stellar cast of four, Custom Made
Theatre Company presents both some key facts and many entertaining fictions
about young Isaac Newton in a two-act comedy that is filled with much drama and
poignancy – and with the added twist of its seventeenth century history played
out in the modern day.
The impetuous Isaac we meet -- with foot that never eases up
its nervous shaking and neck veins that appear permanently swollen – has a
clear goal in life: “People will see my
importance after I’m dead and will know what I did.” To that end, he is obsessed trying to get into
the learned and hallowed Royal Society (true fact, as we see it written on
wall) and its group of famed scientists, including Robert Hooke (already
renowned at the time with a “Law” about elasticity), whose help Isaac solicits
as a sponsor for membership. Hooke and
Newton meet only after the headstrong Isaac entices the older scientist with a
paper outlining his beliefs that light consists of particles (which Hooke has
proclaimed is made of waves). Sparks
ignite immediately between the two super egos, with Catherine Storer -- Isaac’s childhood friend and single love
of his life (another true fact, it seems) -- finding herself in the middle of
what will become a strange and volatile triangle of lovers, friends, and
foes. All the time, our sidelined Actor
observes, narrates as needed, and adds a lot of humor for us as audience with
his snarky remarks and his fantastic facial reactions.
Gabriel A. Ross |
As Isaac, Gabriel A. Ross is a bundle of taunt nerves
looking as if they might explode at any moment.
Intensity personified in every move, stare, and vocal emission, Isaac
seeks “getting into God’s brain.” “If
it’s something I can’t see, I want to see it,” Isaac emphatically declares. Prone to sudden outbursts of passion,
amusement, and especially anger, Mr. Ross employs every ounce of his being to
embody the determination of this aspiring scientist who will indeed be revered
worldwide in his own lifetime and long remembered by school children to this
day. Like a kid who is a third of his actual,
mid-twenties age, he sometimes yells a silly “Yay” while clasping his hands in
the air. But with eyes full of fire and
jaw firmly set, he is quickly capable as an adult to invoke full revenge when
crossed. And with full confidence and an
air of omniscience, he gloats, “If I can pull all this together, then I can see
Him [i.e., God].”
Robin Gabrielli & Adam Niemann |
His would-be supporter but soon rival, Robert Hooke, is
deliciously portrayed by Robin Gabrielli, who arrives on the scene in
pin-stripe suit, close-cut beard, and all the looks of success. There is hardly enough room on stage for his
ego as we first meet him. The cynicism behind his big smile is drippingly
evident as he first meets and talks to the young upstart, Isaac (whom he
clearly already fears as smarter than he).
At one point when he quizzes Isaac about his theories and experiments,
Mr. Gabrielli is like a courtroom lawyer set on drilling the accused into
submissive admissions of guilt.
Employing sighs of disgust, open mouth of feigned disbelief, and fingers
that point with intent of intimidation, his Hooke is in full control – until he
is not. And that opposite portrayal is
just as wonderful to watch Mr. Gabriella enact.
Gabriel A. Ross & Jeunée Simon |
As Isaac’s friend, lover, and would-be wife, Catherine
Storer, Jeunée Simon often speaks volumes without uttering a sound. The expressions she uses are contemporary
enough for us immediately to read their meaning, but their intent is the same
that women have been aiming at their self-centered men throughout the ages. But when Catherine is aroused – either
through love or anger – Ms. Storer knows full well how to show those emotions
believably and forcefully in voice and body.
The strength and integrity of character she shows in her knowing eyes is
in great contrast to the two men who each seek her to be the key to their
defeat of the other.
Coming close to stealing the entire show is the guy mostly
in the background at the whiteboard of revealed truths, Adam Niemann,
identified in the program simply as “Actor.”
He is clearly a modern commentator, often giving us narrative that helps
put events and quotes of the play into a context we can better understand. His quips and insertions of opinion and
observation are usually quick and hilarious, and he too (like Catherine) makes
great use of ongoing, subtle nonverbals that entertain through their silent
(but loudly understood) messages. He
also steps into the story as Sam, a roadside victim of the Plague whom Hooke
encounters on the road; and the wide range of emotional and physical devices he
calls upon as the sick and dying solicitor of Hooke’s aid are nothing short of
stunning.
The simple, yet effective set design of Sarah Phykitt (a
board set on two filing cabinets serving as a long table, surrounded by the
three whiteboards) establishes the contemporary feel on the small Custom Made
stage. The harsh, florescent lighting in
Maxx Kurzunski’s design brings the long-ago scenes of history smack dab into
our right-now reality. Lindsey Eiffert’s
costumes continue that transformation of history into modern day as do the
music and background moods picked by sound designer, Ryan Lee Short.
Putting it all together is the astute direction of Oren
Stevens, who cleverly lets us see beyond the main stage at times when a
character like Catherine gains more insight than her male rivals suspect. His placement of key players in relation to
each other -- sometimes within inches and other times squared opposite as if
about to duel -- is masterful. The only
slight downside, either through fault of script or direction, is that the
second act’s middle begins to lose energy and focus for a time with a feeling
of restlessness as an audience member being the result. Luckily, that dip is quickly recovered as the
climax of the story approaches.
Lucas Hnath, whose The
Christians is just finishing a successful and highly touted run at nearby
San Francisco Playhouse, has made history come fully alive with his
modern-setting treatment of a part of Sir Isaac’s life that most of us have
never heard. Custom Made Theatre Company
has taken his cue and turned Isaac’s Eye
into a fully entertaining, surprising, and captivating evening of live theatre.
Rating: 4 E’s
Isaac’s Eye continues
through March 11, 2017 in production by Custom Made Theatre Company at 533
Sutter Street, San Francisco. Tickets
are available online at www.custommade.org
or by calling 415-789-2682 (CMTC).
Photo Credits: Jay Yamada
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