LENI
Sarah
Greenman
Stacy Ross |
How much responsibility does an
artist own when art is evidently going to be used as propaganda? Can an artist become so engrossed in the
work’s creation to become oblivious to the content’s meaning and to the primary
actors that are a part of its making? Is
groundbreaking perfection of beauty and a positive, direct influence on future
generations of art-makers a high enough accomplishment to forgive an artist’s
past sins? And why is the only woman out
of one hundred thirteen filmmakers associated with Hitler the one person who
was put on trial, post World War II, while some of the men went on to become
highly sought after and celebrated worldwide, including in the U.S?
These are just some of many
questions that readily come to the fore in watching the Bay Area premiere of
Sarah Greenman’s LENI as intimately
and imaginatively staged in Harry’s Upstage of the Aurora Theatre Company.
German film director -- and
innovator of that art form in the 1930s and early ‘40s -- Leni Riefenstahl is
still studied and emulated to this day for the revolutionary techniques she
invented and the stunning, unprecedented beauty she created in two key
films: Triumph of the Will (1935) and
Olympia (1938). At the same time,
from the end of WWII until she died in 2003 at the age of 101, Leni Riefenstahl
was shunned, ostracized, and even hated by most anyone outside of Fascist
circles for her close association with Hitler and particularly for the
glorifying in her films of the Fuhrer and his plans for an Aryan-dominated
world. Until the end of her life, she
continued to claim her concerns were only art for art’s sake with never a
thought for creating propaganda for the Third Reich – something few, if any,
ever came to accept as truth.
Stacy Ross & Martha Brigham |
Taking a cue from the filmmaker’s
drive for innovative, up-close exploration of her subjects, Sarah Greenman digs
deep to discover the possible truth about this cinematic enigma by having her
1930s young and beautiful self interact directly with her older self soon after
her death has been announced and life chronicled in the New York Times. The medium
is their joint project to create a film about her life – post her own death -- focusing
particularly on the questions of her relationship with Hitler and the purposes
she had in making her films. The two
alternate roles of film director and principal actor, with the younger Leni
taking the lead role of self during the mid-‘30s to mid-‘40s and the older
Helene taking her own witness chair to reenact post-war interrogations and
trials where she was drilled for information on her relationship with Hitler
and the Nazi Party. Throughout, there is
the attempt by the reincarnated Riefenstahl to make yet again another “perfect”
film – this one on her own life -- often stopping action and demanding retakes
in order to make her answers more presentable for history and the modern
audience.
Martha Brigham & Stacy Ross |
As directed by Jon Tracy, the
resulting back-and-forth between her two selves is gripping and often-electric
theatre – especially when interspersed with snippets of the very films the two
discuss. The younger Leni often
challenges the older Helene in ways that greatly irritate and upset the latter
(“When did you first find out [about the atrocities of the Third Reich]?” ...
“Why did you never take the responsibility for your part in this?”). The older persona stalwartly and proudly stands
by claims such as “when I am working, all I see is the art ... I only see the
work.” To her, Hitler was the
“choreographer” while she and her films were “only the recorder.” But for all her pushing of the older Helene
to own some of her own doing, when put in the spotlight as the younger Leni,
the younger easily becomes the overly friendly, close to flirty upstart
filmmaker in her one-on-ones with Hitler, unafraid to push him hard for
required funding for her film’s perfection and unabashedly eager to make him
look as good as she could on the big screen.
Martha Brigham plays the young,
bold Leni with an edge sharp and exact.
When in front of the unseen Fuhrer, there is a mature confidence that
emanates from her every, thirty-something muscle and move. One can almost read the well-thought-out,
step-by-step plan plotted by the young filmmaker whose sole purpose is clearly
to win and keep the special confidence and camaraderie of Hitler so that she
can continue to make her films in the manner her perfective ways dictate. Employing eyebrows that speak their own
words, hands that move quickly and then freeze with their own message, and a
formal posture that quickly loosens to denote persistent passion for her art,
Ms. Brigham is exceptional in the role of Leni.
Equally if not even more
impressive is Stacy Ross as the older Helene who emerges from the hereafter (a
shadow world behind closed Venetian blinds at one end of the floor-level stage)
to take charge directing the film of her just-passed life. Often speaking through a broad and forced
smile or in between fast-alternating smiles and grimaces, Helene fiercely
watches the reenactment of scenes of the younger Leni to make sure they meet
her approval, stepping in to edit where needed for a more perfect -- if not
necessarily a more accurate -- take. But
it is when clips of her films are shown that we get a real glimpse of just how
the older filmmaker truly sees herself and her contribution to the world. In those moments, Ms. Ross’s Helene radiates
to the point of almost a luminous glow as she stares in awe at her own wondrous
creations. The depth of her own ego and
her bitterness of later treatment is also fully telecast when Ms. Ross brings
all manner of bile to voice and demeanor as she snarls, “I am on trial for
creating the modern world ... Scheisse!”
Martha Brigham & Stacy Ross |
A low-budget, movie studio has
been created by Nina Ball with full face validity for the mid-1930s era,
complete with adjustable spot lights, director’s chair, and minimal set pieces
for the required scenes. The sense of
movie-making as well as of the other-worldliness of reincarnation is especially
achieved through a lighting design by Kurt Landisman that is a show unto itself
– one of the better lighting accomplishments that I have seen yet this theatre
season. Theodore J.H. Hulsker continues
his fine reputation as sound designer with a number of striking touches,
including a soft, mysterious ‘whoosh’ that signals when filming commences of
the life story that is taking place before us.
An unsettling aspect of Jon
Tracy’s direction of Sarah Greenman’s script in the dark, shadowy, and almost
claustrophobic Harry’s Upstage is the way Helene often interacts directly at the
watching audience, often only inches from the faces of those on the two first
rows on either side of the stage. She
all but accuses us of being ignorantly complicit in honoring her legacy by our
own addiction to the modern ads, sports broadcasts, and movie techniques that
all draw on her innovations. “You want
to be glorious ... So do I,” she sneers.
We are left with the uneasy realization that we probably do not often enough
question or too soon overlook the morals and motives of many of the great artists
we glorify on a day-to-day basis -- both those current and long past.
If there is any downside to Ms.
Greenman’s script, it is an ending that is a bit like the clips of film
shown: It rather crumples and burns out
all too quickly before final resolution.
But, this is also a “film” that is being manufactured to include both
fact and fiction in an attempt to create a life more perfect than it actually
was. To that end, there is not an ending
that can be tied into a nice, complete knot; for the task itself is a given
impossibility.
Using a stellar duet of proven
actors under the acute direction of Jon Tracy and with a lighting schemata of
Kurt Landisman that produces the feel of black-and-white movie-making of the
1930s, Aurora Theatre Company stages a LENI that is fascinating,
thought-provoking, and brimming with its own claim of being high art.
Rating: 4 E
LENI continues in a well-deserved, extended run through May
7, 2017 on the Harry’s Upstage of Aurora Theatre Company, 2018 Addison Street, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at https://auroratheatre.org/ or by calling the box office at
510-843-4822.
Photos Credit: David Allen
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