Battlefield
Adapted by Peter Brook
Based on The
Mahabharata and the Play by Jean-Claude Carrière
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| Jared McNeill, Sean O'Callaghan, Ery Nzaramba & Carole Karemera |
An old man -- obviously blind and in a cloak and outfit
indistinguishable as to historical era or geography -- steps forward to tell us
in a tired, low-keyed voice with little movement of body or face, “The war is
over ... My oldest son, dead ... Millions, dead ... How do I go on? ... Where is justice?” As he disappears into the background of a
mostly empty stage, a younger man (also of no particular time or place)
describes a horrific scene of piled, rotting bodies by the thousands on a field
before him. “These tiger-like men, now extinguished,” he bemoans, while also
describing of eagles, vultures, jackals, and dogs now scavenging the former
heroes. Also with little emotion, he
barely whispers, “Is victory a defeat? ... What have we done?”
And so opens the restrained, solemn, often mesmerizing tale entitled
Battlefield, as we hear of the
aftermath of a major, devastating war and the victor’s reluctance and struggle
to take the reigns as ruler after so much human desecration. Based on an ancient Hindu epic with roots
four thousand years old (The Mahabharata),
Battlefield is Peter Brook’s
adaptation of a 1985, nine-hour play version (and a 1989, five-hour film) of
the original Sanskrit classic that Mr. Brook collaborated to write with
Jean-Claude Carrière. Now on world tour,
this seventy-minute Battlefield lands
on the American Conservatory Theatre stage; and the result is a story being
told as if to a few people huddled around a campfire or in a confined, forest
lodge. For a vast audience of up to one
thousand on three levels, the understated action and the mostly soft, monotone
vocals make the telling sometimes difficult to understand and follow yet still
fascinating to behold.
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| Jared McNeill |
Young Yudhishthira (Jared McNeill) is the stunned victor who
stands in fearful awe of the war’s victims and who now prepares to burn the
body of a cousin who was his enemy. Much
like any civil war, the one that has just passed has evidently pitted rival
parts of the same family against each other, with even brothers (sometimes
unknowingly) fighting, killing, and defeating each other. There is an ‘every war, every man’ quality to
the story that is accentuated by the nondescript costumes of Oria Puppo that
rely on long scarves of red, gold, and brown to both serve as body coverings
and props for the telling of the story.
Yuddhishthira finds his mourning mother, Kunti (Carole
Karemera) who has just recounted to no one in particular with diverted, wide
eyes and almost expressionless countenance the loss of her son Karna, arch
enemy and also unknown brother of her son, Yudhishthira. She encourages her surviving son to take up
his duty as king and is joined by the old, blind man we have already met, Dhritarashtra
(Sean O’Callaghan) who is struggling to let go of his anger and grief over
losing one hundred sons to the army of this now victorious nephew. He lends now his love and support as a father
to the young victor and too encourages him to be a just and ruling king.
The mother and uncle send the doubting young man to his
grandfather, Bhishma (Ery Nzaramba), who lies dying on the battlefield, waiting
for the solstice sun’s rays to give him permission for his last breath. There, Yuddhishthira receives the wisdom of
the elder through a recounting of a number of parables that teach him lessons
about destiny, justice, life, and death – all to prepare him to rule in peace
after so many years of war.
It is during the telling of the grandfather’s stories that
Peter Brooks’ direction of his adaptation gathers an energy and spark that
contrast greatly to the slower paced, meditative storytelling of the play’s
bulk. Actors quickly jump in to become a
snake, pigeon, worm, falcon, and other members of the animal kingdom to act out
the stories that Bhishma tells. A lowly
worm tells of his love of life even as he faces possible death from an
approaching chariot (“Even if I am a worm, I have my pleasures”) while a woman
decides not to kill a snake for her eating her son after learning that destiny
decides these matters, not the snake.
Other tales call on the likes of elephants and mice to make their points,
with Bhishma warning, “This world is ever threatened by death ... What you
planned to do this afternoon, must be done at dawn.”
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| Toshi Tsuchitori on Drums |
If one listens hard enough and forgives words dropped and
phrases lost due to un-miked actors who speak in mixed, African dialects often
more to each other than in the direction or for the hearing by the audience,
then much can be gained and appreciated by this storytelling. There is a feeling, to me, of Native American
stories, particularly of the Southwest, in which animals, rivers, and rocks take
on life to provide important, eternally true lessons. This indigenous quality of the telling is
highly accentuated by the hand-drumming of Toshi Tsuchitori that accompanies
the entire story, with his often providing the emotional punctuation missing
from the steady monotones of the lines spoken by the actors.
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| Carole Karemera, Sean O'Callaghan, Jared McNeill & Ery Nzaramba |
In fact, perhaps the most powerful moments of the entire
seventy minutes comes in the final two-to-three when his drum takes over the
storytelling and leaves both actors and audience in a silent, thought-rich
trance, with all reflecting on the true meaning of the last hour-plus. In the end, Battlefield speaks to Vietnam, to Afghanistan, to Syria, and to too
many other war zones too well known by us all.
If only it spoke in this telling just a bit more forcibly and audibly
for all to hear its entirety.
Rating: 3 E
Battlefield continues
through May 21, 2017 on the Geary Stage of American Conservatory Theatre, 405 Geary Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available online
at http://www.act-sf.org/ or by calling the box office 415-749-2228.
Photos by Caroline Moreau




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