Metamorphoses
Mary Zimmerman (From the translations of Ovid by David R.
Slavitt)
Berkeley Repertory Theatre (in co-production with GuthrieTheater)
Steven Epp & Sango Tajima |
The element that flows, freezes, and flies into the sky as
steam is the medium in which multiple, life-altering transformations occur in each
of dozen-plus vignettes of Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses,
now in a mesmerizing, intriguing, and entirely enchanting production at
Berkeley Repertory Theatre. In this
co-production with Guthrie Theater, multiple myths of Ovid (as translated by
David R. Slavitt) flow from one into the other in, around, and above a
stage-filled pool of sometimes glassy serene, sometimes tumultuously stormy
water. The ten cast members themselves
metamorphose numerous times into new persona – both mortal and godly – as they
wade, float, splash, plunge, and even sink into the watery stage.
As any mythology should, this one begins with a tale of
creation. Demonstrating the separation
of waters to expose land, the evening’s introduction explains how Daniel
Ostling’s (scenic design) blond, planked decking surrounding the pentagonal
“sea” came to be. Both sea and land are under
a mural of the cloud-rich heavens, above which gods will look down, both amused
and irritated by the things those mortals do.
As we are told, the gods created “a paradise except something was
lacking ... words.” And thus, “a man was
born ... he was born so he might talk.” Thankfully, one of this progenitor’s eventual
offsprings, Ovid, used those words to create the wonderful, ancient stories
that Playwright/Director Mary Zimmerman now now streams seamlessly – stories
both dreamlike and nightmarish as well as with tongue often fully in cheek.
Rodney Gardiner & Benjamin T. Ismail |
As two women and a girl wash clothes at water’s edge, one
tells a tale about a rich king named Midas (“net worth $100 billion”) who continuously
searches for more wealth. After Midas
gives refuge to a jive-talking, drunken stranger named Silenus (a hilariously
tipsy Rodney Gardiner), Silenus’ heavenly and hunky pal Bacchus (Benjamin T.
Ismail) extends to the executive-suited Midas (Raymond Fox) any wish he so
desires. We all know where this is going
as the received golden touch leads to everything Midas touches turning to
24-carets, including his playful daughter (Sango Tajima) -- each golden touch
so noted by a bell’s tinkling thanks to sound designer Andre Pluess. As Midas heads in dismay to the end of the
world to wash away the golden plague in a pool reflecting the night sky’s stars
(as advised by Bacchus), the path he trods turns golden behind him, with the
magical beauty of T.J. Gerckens’ lighting design just beginning to expose its
palette of wonder that we will behold for the full ninety minutes of these fascinating
stories. As wave after wave of such stories
washes onto the stage, welcomed and unwelcomed changes continue to occur whenever
kings and queens, gods and goddesses enter the watery domain.
Louise Lamson & Suzy Weller |
A young King Cyex ((Alex Moggridge) leaves his beautiful,
adoring bride, Alcyone (Louise Lamson) on an ill-fated, sea journey -- one in
which a stomping, tromping Poseidon and his bucket-pouring sidekick ensure the
little boat tip overs and its rowing sailors lose their lives. Accompanied by the original music of Willy
Schwarz that provides both peaceful and turbulent scores for many of the
stories, this tale of a forlorn wife who searches incessantly with lantern for
her husband’s body ends with the two receiving a god’s blessing to reunite as graceful
birds flying over a calm sea (and thus establishing what we now know each December
as the Halcyon Days of calm weather when these seabirds nest). By the way, that sympathetic god is the god
of sleep (Mr. Epp), who is reluctantly aroused from his snore-filled repose
wearing black silk pajamas and a crown of floating “Z’s,” with more “Z’s”
raining down from the heavens.
Benjamin T Ismail & Louise Lamson |
As the pool’s waves continue to ripple, stories include
those about an egoistic Narcissus (Rodney Gardiner) who is frozen at water’s
edge in his own self-love and about a forbidden, erotic love affair between
daughter (Ms. Tajima) and royal father (Mr. Epp) where body-lifting love-making
in red-flowered waters is the result of sexy Aphrodite’s doing (a devilish-red Felicity
Jones Latta). Much purer love occurs
between a naked and blind Eros (Mr. Ismail) and his to-be soul mate, Psyche
(Ms. Latta), and between a skipping, jolly wood nymph wearing her gingham skirt,
Pomona (Ms. Lamson), and a multi-disguised, wooing Vertumnus (Mr. Ismail) – two
stories that actually end happily. On
the other hand, there is the gruesome-ending story of how a long-tongued, lizard-like
monster called Hunger (Ms. Tijima) latches onto the back of a foolish destroyer
of nature (Mr. Epp) and sends him into an eating frenzy that ends with his own
foot being salted and peppered before his final feast.
Rodney Gardiner, Louise Lamson & Alex Moggridge |
Some stories are narrated by a third-party while the events
occur in front of us, as in the story told in two versions and from the two
perspectives of the lovers, Orpheus (Mr. Moggridge) and Eurydice (Suzy Weller),
as Orpheus attempts to lead his dead bride out of the Underworld, with the
second story’s narrative of Felicity Jones Latta being particularly and
poetically powerful. The many ways water
is employed in the evening’s stories includes in this case a stunning raining
of Orpheus’ own tears over his crying body, emotionally moving enough to woo
the gods to give him an ill-fated chance to find his lost bride.
Rodney Gardiner |
Comedy reigns in the story of the sun-glassed, sun-loving Phaeton
(a loud-mouthed, whining Rodney Gardiner). While reclining in the pool on his yellow float
and in his bright yellow trucks (just one of dozens of water-worthy,
eye-popping costumes designed by Mara Blumenfeld), he unloads his woes against Daddy
Apollo (Mr. Moggridge) to his deck-side, note-taking therapist (Lisa Tejero),
who is wont to lecture him and then us in words full of psychiatric
gobbledygook.
In all these watery plots from ancient tales, this cast
brings a modern sense and a reminder that change is the one constant present in
all our individual worlds. The zealous
and silly, sensitive and sensual, brassy and bold ways these actors portray
their human and heavenly selves are in every case completely compelling. Guided by the sheer artistry and unbounded
imagination immolating from Mary Zimmerman’s direction, the cast assembled by
Amy Potozkin for this co-production by Berkeley Repertory Theatre and Guthrie
Theater is mythical in its combined capabilities.
Rodney Gardiner, Steven Epp, Alex Moggridge, Lisa Tejero & Benjamin T. Ismail |
And no finer example of the ensemble’s, the director’s, and
the production staff’s magnificent teaming is the coda story presented by the
full cast in a pool of candle-lit water where one last act of kindness results
in two lifelong lovers (played by Alex Moggridge and Lisa Tejero) being
rewarded with an eternity intertwined in each other’s arms. The beauty of the story’s final words and the
hushed scene of flickering reflections welcome an exhausted but now exhilarated
Bacchus, who finally finds his redemptive lake.
As the floating lights extinguish, to a person it appears to me that all
audience members leave with satisfied smiles and eyes full of the evening’s
magic.
Rating: 5- E, “Must- See”
Metamorphoses
continues in an extended run through March 24, 2019 on the Peet’s Stage of Berkeley
Repertory Theatre, 2015
Addison Street, Berkeley, CA. Tickets
are available at http://www.berkeleyrep.org/ or by calling 510-647-2975
Tuesday – Sunday, noon – 7 p.m.
Photos
by Kevin Berne/Berkeley Repertory Theatre
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