Love’s Labor Lost
William
Shakespeare
The Musicians of Love's Labor Lost |
That this is a William
Shakespeare play is what the ticket says, but that the play is Love’s Labor Lost begins to explain
everything. Perhaps no comedy of the
Bard has as many forays into the silliest of puns; as much fractured fun with
foreign languages; or the ongoing onslaught of multiple, mistaken identities. Few can boast the same or more stock
characters filling its stage. Director
Amanda Dehnert recognizes that the probability is high that many of the word-packed
rhymes and Elizabethan references and jokes may go way over our heads. She thus employs with tongue fully in cheek
countless elements of slapstick, Vaudeville, early TV sitcoms, and comedia dell’arte to ensure that laughs
ring loud even when the lines are not quite (if at all) comprehended.
William Thomas Hodgson, Daniel José Molina & Jeremy Gallardo |
The Royal Courts of Love's Labor Lost |
Tatiana Wechsler, Alejandro Escalante, Jennie Greenberry & Nina Feelings |
For all the fun in fooling each
other that the royals are having, the people of Navarre are whooping it up even
more in their own ways, each taking on a role that one might find in a comedia dell’arte troupe traveling
through Italy in Shakespeare’s time.
Richard Howard is a delightfully pompous braggart named Sir Adrian “OOOO”
(as he likes to announce himself) Dearmaddow, who clearly sees himself far more
intellectual, handsome, and genteel than anyone around him. His page, Moth (Shaun Taylor-Corbett) does
not have much trouble out-smarting his master and has much fun trading barbs
and puns with Costard, the stock character servant of the king’s household who
brings down the house delivering a Vaudeville-inspired telephone act (using
hands for phones) about the word “remuneration.”
Richard Howard, Robin Goodrin Nordli & Chris Butler |
Together, the “lower” life of
Navarre join, as can be the case in Shakespearean comedies, in a play within
the play, this one called “The Nine Worthies.”
Honoring nine of history’s most valiant (Hector, Alexander, Pompey the
Great, etc.), the play becomes one of the evening’s highlights as overhead
projectors are used in tickling fashion to project animated figures. The heads, arms, and flapping tongues of the
likes of Moth, Custard, and the rest are rollickingly the background for
projected foregrounds on their torsos.
The unnatural state of affairs
has set the whole world of Navarre somewhat amok where natural courting between
young men and women must be done in sleuth and stealth and where the feminine
guests are left largely to fare on their own outside the court. Perhaps as a lesson for us all, Shakespeare
does not let all come together in a miraculous ending where wedding bells ring
and all are happy. Love’s Labors Lost is not sad in its ending and in fact, there is an
uplifting, satisfactory sense. Amanda
Dehnert allows her actors x both to be solemn and to find ways to be hopeful,
sweet, and even silly. In the end, the
evening still ends in rock concert style, with audience leaving probably not
totally understanding all they have seen and heard, but certainly having seen
enough to leave with huge grins plastered on their faces.
Rating: 4.5 E
Love’s Labor Lost continues
through October 14, 2018 in the Allen Elizabethan Theatre at the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival. Tickets are available at https://www.osfashland.org/on-stage.
Photos
by Jenny Graham
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