Oslo
J.T. Rogers
J Paul Nicolas, Ashkon Davaran, Ryan Tasker, Brian Herndon & Paris Hunter Paul |
On September 13, 1993, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
and Palestinian Liberation Organization negotiator Mahmoud Abbas signed a
Declaration of Principles in which the PLO recognized the legitimacy of the
State of Israel and the Israelis recognized the PLO as the official
representative of the Palestinian people and partner with Israel for further
negotiations. Containing many other
initial agreements (including creating a Palestinian Authority for
self-government in parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip), the historic
signing in Washington, D.C. was the result of several months of under-cover,
highly secretive negotiations in Oslo, Norway between a small group of Israelis
and Palestinians – with no involvement and little knowledge of the
Americans. How those series of secret talks
were initiated and how they proceeded is the subject of one of the most
celebrated plays of the new century, Oslo
by J.T. Rogers. Marin Theatre
Company opens its 2018-19 season with a West Coast premiere of the 2017 Tony-winning
Best Play in a tension-filled production that in every respect imaginable is
stunning, engrossing, and eye-opening while at the same time is genuinely
heart-warming and continually surprising with its laugh-aloud humor.
Erica Sullivan & Mark Anderson Phillips |
Through a mutual friend, playwright J.T. Rogers happened to
meet a Norwegian social scientist named Terje Rød-Larsen. The story that his new acquaintance related
of how he and his wife, Mona Juul (an official in Norway’s Foreign Ministry) helped
orchestrate secret talks between age-old, Middle East enemies inspired J.T.
Rogers to pen a masterful script about a story heretofore largely untold. He learned -- as do we now with our attention
fixed almost breathlessly to the events unfolding on the stage before us – that
in a visit to Jerusalem, Terje and Mona witnessed an uprising in the making. There, they saw two young boys, one Israeli
and one Palestinian, facing each other with guns pointed at the other. Terje’s dream at that point becomes to find a
way “to give those boys a different narrative.”
Acting audaciously and with no authority, Terje arranges a
meeting in Oslo between two economics professors from the University of Haifa
and the PLO’s Finance Minister along with a PLO liaison – only informing Johan
Jørgen Holst (Norway’s Foreign Minister and boss of Mona) after the four are on
their way to Oslo. That these initial
four have any blessing by those who really count (i.e., Prime Minister Rabin
and Chairman Arafat) is unclear, but that does not stop Terje from claiming
that they do. The initial reaction of
the Foreign Minister to Terje’s meddling in affairs that the U.S. has been the
prime negotiator for two decades is, “You are a fucking dilettante.” However, Terje is stubbornly unstoppable because
in his mind, “If you succeed, you will change the world.”
Mark Anderson Phillips is the bull-headed, highly excitable,
and sky-high optimistic dreamer/orchestrator, Terje Rød-Larsen. If ever there were a part written for this
perennially Bay Area favorite, it is the role of Terje. While he has not quite mastered a
Norwegian-sounding accent, Mr. Phillips in all other dimensions convinces us
that a nobody like Terje could in fact have pulled off the near-impossible task
of bringing these two warring parties to the negotiating table and coming up
with an accord that for years had eluded them and their American partners. The intensity and determination that
permeates Mr. Phillips’ entire body – veins popping, breath huffing, eyes
steeled, fists pumping -- convince us that Terje is a force that cannot be
easily curtailed. Who else would pick up
the phone in the middle of the night to call Chairman Arafat – someone he has
never met or talked to -- so that Arafat can, without warning, negotiate on the
phone final details of an accord with Shimon Peres?
But it is the more calm, more grounded approach, advice, and
guidance of Terje’s wife, Mona Juul, that ensures he does not at times blast
the process to bits and pieces through his erupting emotions. Erica Sullivan is the equally daring, but
more reserved, Mona; and she is nothing short of magnificent in the role. Often our spotlighted guide to give us needed
background and historical details to the whirlwind of proceedings occurring
before us, her Mona exudes her own brand of unbounded resolve and sure-footed confidence
but with a manner that the foreign representatives around her can more readily
trust than the boy-like exuberance of her husband.
The Cast of "Oslo" |
The series of meetings begin with awkward hesitation and
inbred distrust; but through the power of Johnny Walker Red, Norwegian waffles,
and Terje’s nonnegotiable rule of engagement that the players must first get to
know each other personally, something magical begins to happen. Hilariously told jokes are shared; moving stories
about parents are related; and two new, proud dads discover that their Israeli
and Palestinian daughters in fact have the same name. Moments of tense stalemate, of anger on the
verge of actual blows, and of dead-ends with no apparent means of escape are in
juxtaposition with other moments of mutual listening for deeper understanding,
of surprising discoveries of agreements, and of difficult decision to
compromise. Social scientist Terje’s touted,
negotiation process of “gradualism” unfolds before our eyes. It is as if we are watching both a
documentary of a recent history we vaguely know and of a drama of unlikely but
fascinating fiction that seems impossible ever to have occurred.
Clearly, Director Jasson Minadakis has made hundreds of the
right choices in terms of pace and pause, of uninterrupted chaos and
unchallenged calm as well as of breakpoint emotions and backed-off reflections.
With a liberal allowance of individual actor
interpretation but always with firm handle of the many comings and goings, he
orchestrates this large cast of fourteen who play over twenty different
roles. He has taken the incredibly
well-written script of J. T. Rogers and ensured that a story both enriched and
complicated by its many meetings of many different people of several
nationalities is clearly told with equal measures of tension and heart.
Beyond Terje and Mona, many other personalities parade
across the stage, often bursting at the seams with ego, conviction, and
self-righteousness. Each leaves a
memorable mark on the unfolding drama and in our memories as audience. While difficult to call out every performance
in such a large cast, mention must be given to the initially timid and later
much more bold professors from Israel --
Brian Herndon as Yair Hirschfeld and Ryan Tasker as Ron Pundak – and to their
Palestinian counterparts in those initial encounters, J. Paul Nicholas as Ahmed
Qurie and Ashkon Davaran as Hassan Asfour.
These four all bring a genuine humanity and a believable transformation to
men who arrive with no reason ever to like those on the other side of the
table, given the atrocities each has witnessed perpetrated by those the others
represent.
J. Paul Nicolas, Mark Anderson Phillips, Erica Sullivan & Paris Hunter Paul |
Paris Hunter Paul is particularly striking in his singularly
powerful depiction of Uri Savir, Director-General of Israel’s Foreign
Ministry. Arriving later into the
process with a stone-faced, barking set of demands, his Uri’s own changes as he
forges a trusting relationship with Ahmed Qurie are remarkable to behold, with
kudos going to both actors in performances convincing and captivating.
Charles Shaw Robinson too is exceptional as
harsh-skeptic-turned-fierce-advocate of Terje’s process in the role of
Norwegian Foreign Minister Johan Jørgen Jolst.
His wife, Marianne Heiberg (Marcia Pizzo), joins -- among several roles
she plays -- Mr. Robinson as the hosting staff at the private estate where the
talks take place. As housekeeper and
cook Finn Grandal, Ms. Pizzo is one of the night’s sheer delights with her
contagious charm and wit. Finally, a tall, commanding Corey Fischer is uncanny in his brief presence and performance as Shimon Peres.
The overall excellence of this Marin Theatre production is
due not only to the cast and director but also to a creative team that excels with
visual and aural accomplishments from beginning to end. The estate set design of Sean Fanning is both
grand and simple in its elegance and has an instant flexibility that allows the
many scene changes to occur seamlessly. The
lighting of York Kennedy provides an impressive backdrop for mood and time
changes and exacting spots for moments singular in storytelling intent. Mike Post's backdrop projections remind us the real-time, often violent events going on even as the negotiations for long-term peace are occurring. Chris Houston has composed a score that has
an air of urgency and warning of something big about to happen, while Sara
Huddleston’s sound design delivers that music and other well-balanced effects
masterfully. Finally, as always, Fumiko
Bielefeldt has designed costumes that define and dignify the subject matter
while also capture some of the heart and humor conveyed along the way.
If ever there were a “must-see” production, Marin Theatre
Company’s two-hour, thirty-minute staging of J.T. Rogers’ Oslo is one. While we today
know that the Oslo Accords have not yet led to the resolution of a myriad of
outstanding issues between the Israelis and the Palestinians, we can still hope
for an eventual realization of the toast Uri Savor at one point makes: “To the future, may it be different and may
it come soon.”
Rating: 5 E, “Must-See”
Oslo
continues in an extended run through October 28, 2018 at Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley. Tickets are available online at https://tickets.marintheatre.org/Online/ or by calling the box office at
415-388-5208, Tuesday – Sunday, noon – 5 p.m.
Photo Credits: Kevin
Berne
There are some interesting points in time on this article but I don’t know if I see all of them center to heart. There's some validity however I'll take hold opinion till I look into it further. Good article , thanks and we want extra! Added to FeedBurner as effectively online casino games
ReplyDelete