Oedipus El Rey
Luis Alfaro
Gendell Hing-Hernandez, Armando Rodriguez, Esteban Carmona & Juan Amador |
“Do we lay down and take what the world has given us?
Or do we break down the cycle, the system, and tell new stories?
Can we live the story not yet told and the possibility not yet
imagined?
Or are we fated?”
Ten years ago, Magic Theatre staged the world premiere of
Luis Alfaro’s gripping, disturbing, and bone-chilling Oedipus El Rey – a modern retelling of Sophicles’ Oedipus Rex where these questions of
what is destined and what is possible to change are posed. Ten years later, the Magic revives the play
that has since seen over twenty productions across the country; but since the
initial run, Black Lives Matter, headlines about over-crowded prisons
disproportionately filled with brown and black men, and a president who spouts
almost daily disparaging remarks about non-white people now make these
questions more relevant and more immediate than ever. If a Latino man, for example, declares as
does Luis Alfaro’s modern day Oedipus, “I want to write my own story,” how
possible is it – especially if he has already spent much of his young life in
prison for a mistake he made as a naïve youth?
If upon being freed he exudes new-found confidence, wants to assert his
own kind of leadership among peers, and plans to use the knowledge he has
gained from much study to lead a new life, will the society around him see him
for who he really now is or only see him how that same society believes he has
been fated by his heritage, ethnicity, and color to become?
In a revised production that is as much if not even more
arrestingly heart-pounding, emotionally moving, and profoundly
thought-provoking than was the world premiere, Magic Theatre stages once again
a Oedipus El Rey by Luis Alfaro and
directed by Loretta Greco that is a must-see where these and many more
questions are posed and begging us to consider and address them head-on.
The Coro |
Luis Alfaro takes Sophicles’ storyline and brings it into
the twenty-first century, retaining elements of mythical nature like prophecies
from local oracles and a confrontation with the dreaded Sphinx. Like in ancient Greek plays, ever-present is
also a Chorus – in this case, a Chicano Coro of four men –narrate in
over-lapping sentences of both Spanish and English while also making comments among
themselves and stepping into a variety of roles to further the story’s telling. The Coro are prisoners at a California State
Prison in North Kern – all clad in orange – who have helped raise the boy,
Oedipus, and who line up to tell us the story of a man they variously describe
as one “living in prison, raised in the yard” and “feared by many” who also
“wants to be something more,” “[is] with no limits,” “[is] destined to be.”
Sean San José & Esteban Carmona |
One Coro steps forward to become the local gangster-leader
and his father, Laius, who hears a prediction that the baby in his wife’s
pregnant body will one day grow up to kill him.
Laius instructs his loyal friend, Tiresias, to kill the baby boy after
his wife, Jocasta, has given birth.
Tiresias cannot do so and instead raises the adoring boy as his own son,
even behind the walls of a prison where they both reside for separate crimes of
robberies. Oedipus truly believes that the
old man, now blind, is his father, with whom he has spent much sacred time in
the prison’s library. He emerges at the
time of his release as a self-assured – bordering on cocky – young man,
resolute to create his own path in the world but unaware that he has been born
into a community and a heritage where the odds are totally stacked against him
of succeeding.
Esteban Carmona |
Physically, Esteban Carmona’s Oedipus immediately gives the
impression of being admirably non-stoppable in his determination, repeatedly
demonstrating what seem impossible exercises of incredibly fast and furious push-ups,
high jumps, and squats. His taut and
muscular physique, his quick smirk of a smile, and his overall sure nature
displayed in walk and posture shout of his eager readiness to take on the
world.
A dream where a multi-headed owl (the four Coros) predicts
that Oedipus is accursed and that he will kill his father – who he is sure is
Tiresias – is quickly rejected by Oedipus as ridiculous. However, when leaving prison in a car the
gentle, caring Tiresias (Sean San José, also a Coro) has provided for him, he
becomes involved in a road rage incident where his own quickness to anger
mirrors the equally hot-headed man in the other car, whose pulled knife leads
to Oedipus killing him. Only we know at
this time that Oedipus has fulfilled the prediction of murdering his real
father, Laius (an impulsive, wily, and callous Gendell Hing-Hernandez, also a
Coro).
Esteban Carmona & Lorraine Velez |
Oedipus lands in the home of a friend and current ‘king’ of
his Latino neighborhood, Creon (a fierce, wiry, and soon suspicious Armando
Rodrigues, playing also a Coro), who lives with his beautiful, sister, Jocasta
(Lorriane Velez). An agreed one-week’s
stay by Oedipus extends into extra weeks and then to the marriage altar as he
and Jocasta soon become passionately attracted, with the two actors engaged in
a scene of bare, mutual passion and love-making that is as poetically sensuous
as any I have ever seen on the live stage.
The powerful magnetism between the two is visceral, with neither
realizing that part of that natural pull is because Jocasta is the mother
Oedipus never knew.
As Oedipus asserts not only his manhood with the woman he
loves but also his desire for leadership in challenging her brother’s old-guard
way of doing things, fate begins to slip its pre-determined hand of cards into
his life in ways he will not be able fully to control. Esteban Carmona and Lorraine Velez’s
performances are electrifying and heart-breaking as the events unfold with a
fury that speaks of the violence that seems by unalterable definition to
surround their lives and their fates.
Loretta Greco’s direction of the ninety minutes never lets
us forget the ancient play’s origins while all the time hitting us with the
firm realities of today’s world in the cells and streets where these Latino men
live out their lives. The projections of
Hana Kim combine incredibly beautifully shadowed scenes of trees and stars
along with splashed patterns of murals and stark patterns that bring the more
harsh worlds to full life. Wen-Ling Liao’s
lighting sends us somewhere into and between a dream world of ancient
storytelling and a cold, stark world of a reality difficult to face and
understand. Jake Rodriguez’s sound
design jars us with the clang of metal, prison doors that lock men in like animals
while also reminding us and them that somewhere nearby a highway of rushing
cars continue to pass by in everyday lives of freedom. Jacqueline Scott’s designed tattoos and Dave
Maier’s directed fight instruction bring realities further to bear in the
intimate, Magic setting, reminding us that what we are seeing is much more an
American reality than just an ancient tale of Greekdom.
If in ten years, Magic Theatre chooses to revise yet a third
time this powerful play that will surely continue to reside firmly in each
audience member’s memory as did the original of 2009 reside in mine, we can
only hope that its timely relevance will be much less to the world of 2029 than
it is to that of 2019. That will perhaps
depend on how much our current society responds to a Coro’s final, haunting
messages:
“Oye
Gente!
Look
at Oedipus.
His
story. Our story.
Will
we remember our stories?
Or are we doomed to repeat them?”
Or are we doomed to repeat them?”
Rating: 5 E, “Must-See”
Oedipus El Rey
continues through June 23, 2019 at Magic
Theatre, Fort Mason Center, San Francisco.
Tickets are available online at http://magictheatre.org/ or by calling
the box office at (415) 441-8822.
Photo
Credits: Jennifer Reilly
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