Othello
William Shakespeare
Isabel Siragusa & L. Peter Callender |
While there are no American flags flying and no “U.S. Army”
or “U.S. Navy” stitching on the military uniforms worn, the intentions of
Director Carl Jordan could hardly be clearer.
There is no way for him to camouflage that this opening production of
the African-American Shakespeare Company’s twenty-fifth season of William
Shakespeare’s Othello involves
American troops stationed in yet another Middle Eastern country, this time
Cyprus. The director ensures from the
opening scene that this oft-produced tragic tale takes on the immediate
relevance of headlines we are reading every day.
A second, brilliant decision in terms of casting by the
director also makes this Othello as
current as this morning’s Huffpost
headline. While most productions of the
classic only cast the Moor Othello himself as a man of color, Carl Jordan has
somewhat removed race as the core difference between Othello and his compatriot
soldiers. In this production, blacks and
whites abound working, living, and even coupled together (e.g., Iago’s wife,
Emilia, is black). In this director’s
vision, when the most reviled of all Shakespeare’s villains, Iago, says
point-blankly and unashamedly, “I hate the Moor,” we cannot help but draw
comparisons to the online pictures and videos we see of everyday Americans (and
even top leaders) showing their hate of those of not born in this country. Apart from the themes of jealousy and
misjudgment that center on Othello himself, this African-American Shakespeare
Company’s Othello is a stark,
unsettling reflection of the doubts and mistrusts that can quickly multiply
when a respected source like Iago begins to spread rumors and outright lies
about “the other” among us – about that person who is a different nationality
(in this case, African), has foreign speech patterns (Othello has a distinctly
different accent), and show mannerisms that make him stand out from those who
look and act like ‘us.’
What makes this Othello
particularly startling is that Iago could be any one of a hundred people
most of us in the audience knows. On the
outside and at first meeting, he is nice-looking, wears a Zuckerberg-like
hoodie, and is quick to buddy up to whomever he meets around the base – the kind of guy who grew up next door to
the majority of today’s Americans. After
all, everyone – and of course especially his superior officer, Othello --
refers to Iago as “honest,” “good,” a man of “trust.”
MIchael Ray Wisely & L. Peter Callender |
But what also makes this Iago unfortunately so currently familiar
is that he is quick to talk and spread rumors about the foreigner among them,
this Moor. What sends chills down one’s
spine is how time and again Michael Ray Wisely as Iago turns to address the
audience directly in such a manner as if to say, “You understand ... You know
how these foreigners are among us.” He
openly shares with us his ideas-in-the-making and finally explicitly tells us
his demonic plan to take down Othello, not hiding any motive or detail of how
he will convince Othello that Desdemona is having an affair with Cassio (the
lieutenant who was promoted over Iago).
We can see that he thinks that naturally we too have the same dislike as
he of this outsider Othello.
The assumptions Iago makes with his tone and looks -- one
almost expects him to wink at us to let us know he ‘knows’ we agree – rattles
to the core and leads one to think of a certain president whose tweets and
video clips make the same types of assumptions as he too often asserts criminals
are infiltrating the U.S. through the Mexican border. Michael Ray Wisely is a modern-day, American
Everyman who is fed up with those foreigners who are invading our institutions,
making decisions to take jobs away from us, and who are even marrying our
women. As such, he is scary and all too
real.
And though there are frequent mentions of the script’s
Venice and still plenty of early seventeenth century phrases and language
amongst some updated phrases and four-letter epitaphs, peppering the story’s
unveiling are also the sounds of overhead helicopters and jets, piped in
snippets of a TV reporter, and the buzzers and bells of a modern military
compound. Together, director and
creative team continue to reinforce that this Othello is happening right now, all around us.
Isabel Siragusa & L. Peter Callender |
The military hero, Othello -- who in this case has evidently
immigrated from somewhere in Muslim Africa to rise to hero-status in the
military – is charming in his exacting accent and manner, is well-spoken and
clearly of exceptional intelligence, and is full of amiable confidence when we
first meet him. L. Peter Callender
provides few, if any, early hints of the emotional, mental, and psychological
breakdown that is soon to occur. With
his new bride, Desdemona, he is passionately and unashamedly demonstrative of
his love for her, picking her up while repeatedly kissing her in front of his
gathered troops. With his comrades, he
is jovial and familiar as well as quick to joke and even to hug.
His eventual metamorphosis into a full-fledge monster is all
the more horrific because Mr. Callender is able at first to make us believe
that maybe this particular Othello will not be taken in by Iago’s outlandish
insinuations and will in fact continue to love his beautiful, young bride who
so clearly adores him. When he laughs
off Iago’s initial insinuations of Desdemona’s infidelity, we hope that the
“green-eyed monster” of jealousy will this time pass him by; but we have also
just heard his Othello say with eerie prediction as his wife exits, “But I do
love her, and when I am out of love, chaos will come again.”
When Othello does transform, rarely has there been any more
violent outbursts by a physically scary Othello than the one on this
stage. Mr. Callendar’s increasing bouts
of rage and fury are shattering to behold.
His rants become animal-like howls; his eyes almost pop out of his head;
he beats his chest in one moment and collapses on the ground in the next – sometimes screaming his anger, sometimes just
freezing his mouth open and in a look shocked and horrid. His entire being becomes so consumed with the
jealous disease that Iago has infected within him that he shakes uncontrollably
from head to toe; his voice shifts to that of a monster; and any sign of
logical, rational thinking totally leaves him. His body literally shrinks, twists, and molds
into wrinkled forms different from that the noble man we met just barely an
hour prior. The performance is nothing
short of magnificent and horrifying at the same time.
Isabel Siragusa |
Surrounding these two who together march others towards a
destiny of undeserved destruction are two wives and a comrade: Desdemona,
Emilia, and Cassio. Desdemona (Isabel
Siragusa) appears barely past her teen years and obviously dedicated to her new
groom and heads-over-heals in love with him as a girl who has found her first
love. She exudes a sense of innocence and naivite. She shows no hesitation to be open about her
close friendship with Cassio and in fact does flirt a bit with him as any young
woman might do with a friend who is much closer to her age than her graying
husband. She is not about to stop
pestering her husband in a loving, playful, but ever-persistent mode to
reconsider a demotion he gives to Cassio (after a drunken brawl orchestrated by
Iago on the lightweight drinker, Cassio). She also seems to miss all clues how much her
childish bantering is upsetting her newly wed husband. As Othello’s suspicions become more intense
and his anger begins to take over, Ms. Siragusa’s performance proportionately intensifies
in multiple dimensions to a climax where she succumbs in shocked disbelief
while still purporting her love for a husband who is about to kill her. The interpretation given to this Desdemona is
somewhat disturbing in that she shows few signs of her own personhood and
independence, but she also reminds us how easy it is for a young woman in our
society to fall into the sway and obedience of an attractive, publicly renowned
man who so dominates and powers over her.
In the MeToo era, her Desdemona is a warning signal of how this
seductive dominance can happen to almost anyone.
As Iago’s wife, Emilia (also a member of the military
troop), Champagne Hughes is often initially in the background, watching
intently but rarely saying much. She is,
however, desperate to be noticed by her husband who seems to have a disdain for
her, and she is most certainly one more person who is hugely naïve as she
agrees to steal Desdemona’s handkerchief (a gift from Othello) in order to
please her husband. When the true nature
of her husband and his motives finally become known to her, the rage against
him and Othello (and husbands in general) and the despair she feels for
Desdemona add up to an astoundingly powerful performance for Ms. Hughes, her
final fifteen or so minutes being a memorable highlight in an evening already
full of incredible performances by her fellow actors.
As Cassio, Ariel Sandino is convincing as a nice, somewhat
shy, and incredibly handsome guy any one would immediately like. That he is duped by Iago is easy to believe
because Cassio is so good-natured and so clearly convinced that Iago is “my
honest friend.”
Gabriel Ross & Michael Ray Wisely |
Contrasting in every way to him is Gabriel Ross as an
emotionally wild, almost clownish, and completely impulsive Roderigo – a
supposed friend of Iago’s who believes Desdemona should be his wife and who
becomes a too-easy puppet to Iago’ fiendish schemes, believing he can still win
her hand once Othello is out of the picture.
But like Cassio, Roderigo’s naivite runs rapid through the veins of his awkwardly
jerky body; his too-easily-given trust leads to a demise that involves them
both.
Helping round out this fine cast is Samira Mariama as a
business-like, no b-s Duke who says as much with her non-verbal smirks as she
does with the words the Bard provides her.
She returns later in the play as a gaudily dressed Bianca, the openly
sexy, loud-mouthed, bedtime diversion of Cassio who becomes yet another
instrument in Iago’s evil plan to undo Othello via Cassio.
Gene Thompson is the very white, probably racist father of
Desdemona, Brabantio, who scornfully opposes the marriage of his daughter to
the foreign-born (and black) Othello.
When he goes to make his case to the black Duke who clearly sees right
through his obvious prejudices, one cannot help but laugh at his stupidity. Durand Garcia, Stephen Dietz, and Tyri
Ballard complete the ensemble, each having their own singularly notable moments
as Gratino, Lodovico, and Montano, respectively.
L. Peter Callender |
Cayla Ray-Perry’s set design of skeletal wooden and metal
buildings quickly tell us how unstable the relations are of those who reside
inside while her background, brilliantly colored cutouts of a Cyprus village
call upon us to remember how foreign the American troops themselves are in this
far-off land of ancient customs. Kevin Myrick’s
lighting design highlights the brightness of a seashore country as well as the
dark shadows of brewing, diabolical plans and events while he and sound
designer Larry Tasse collaborate to bring the flashes and sounds of war into
our presence. Durand Garcia’s fight
instructions prove to be excellent in the realism of pounding, physical
altercations, especially leading to an abhorrent climax as Othello assaults his
wife on her death bed. Finally, costume
designer Keri Fitch keeps us constantly aware that these are surely American
military on foreign assignment while she also clothes Desdemona in
rose-filtered innocence and Bianca in bold-striped sauciness.
Even if one has seen Othello
a dozen times, the current production of the Shakespeare classic by
African-American Shakespeare Company is one not to be missed. Its timeliness, innovation of casting, and
sheer acting prowess makes this Othello
one to be long remembered and discussed by its audiences.
Rating: 5 E
Othello concludes its
short run of only six performances next weekend, October 26 and 27, 2019 in
production by the African-American Shakespeare Company at Marines’ Memorial
Auditorium, 609 Sutter Street, San Francisco, CA. Tickets are available online at www.african-americanshakes.org.
Photo Credits: Joseph Giammarco
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