Richard
Kline, Sean Cullen, Deirdre Madigan, Brenda Meaney,
Jenny Leona, and John Skelley. All photos by Carol Rosegg.
Jenny Leona, and John Skelley. All photos by Carol Rosegg.
There’s a war going on, and the
Stott family living in Newcastle, England, has to soldier through as best it
can, what with rationing and German planes flying overhead, bombs dropping and
young men going off to war, perhaps never to return. That’s the premise of C.
P. Taylor’s “And a Nightingale Sang,” which recently opened at the Westport
Country Playhouse. The play, written in 1977 and commissioned by Newcastle upon Tyne ’s Live Theatre Company, will resonate
based on one’s age and heritage. For Brits seeing this, or any production of
this bitter-sweet comedy, there might be a lot of head nodding and whispers of,
“Yes, love, that’s the way it was.” For an American audience, however, there
might also be some heads nodding, but for a different reason.
Take away the frame of World War II
and what we have here is a garden-variety melodrama: George (Sean Cullen), the
Dad, is somewhat preoccupied with his music and his politics; Mam (Deirdre
Madigan), also know as “The Saint,” is preoccupied with the church. Their
marriage has devolved to mere moments of contention and convenience. Andie,
(Richard Kline), a.k.a “the old soldier” (he fought in WWI), is the
wise-foolish Grandfather, devoted to pets and, Lear-like, shuffling between the
homes of his daughters. Then there’s George and Mam’s “pretty,” flighty
daughter, Joyce (Jenny Leona), and Helen (Brenda Meaney), the “plain,”
down-to-earth daughter who limps because one leg is shorter than the other.
Jenny Leona
and John Skelley
These are all, initially, stock
characters, as are the two soldiers who come into their lives: the somewhat
feckless Eric (John Skelley), who woos and wins (sort of) Joyce, and his
oh-so-sincere comrade in arms, Norman (Matthew Greer), who is drawn to Helen.
Bombs may fall, planes may strafe, but people are, after all, people (though
Grandpa may disagree), and they will get themselves involved in all sorts of
emotional quagmires that involve a possible unwanted pregnancy, falling in love
with someone who hides his past, and making do in a marriage that functions on
formality. It’s all been seen before on stage and on screens, and familiarity
might very well breed, if not contempt, then at least a certain degree of been-there-done-that
boredom. But wait…
Brenda
Meaney and Matthew Greer
This rather mundane material is
brought to life by an absolutely stellar cast under the direction of David
Kennedy, led by Meaney, who is both entrancing and beguiling. Even before the
play commences she is on stage, roaming scenic designer Kristen Robinson’s set
(a blend of representation and presentation that works but, somehow, has the
feel of a warehouse), touching and remembering, for she will not only be the
primary character in the play but also its narrator, which calls for her to
seamlessly shift from character to commentator, which she does with delightful
aplomb. At one moment she is the awkward Helen, unsure of herself, and in the
next she is the wistful, wise historian (and analyst) of her own and her
family’s actions. It’s a bravura performance.
To modify an old theater bromide,
there are no dull roles, only dull actors, and none of the actors on the Westport stage is dull.
Given the rather cardboard characters they are asked to portray, they infuse
life and vitality into them and make you believe that these are living,
breathing people, and that their problems, fears, desires and failures have
meaning.
Richard
Kline and Deirdre Madigan
Besides Meaney’s lustrous
performance, there are two other stand-outs: Kline’s Andie and Madigan’s Peggy
(on Mam). Playwright Taylor
has given the Grandfather character some of the play’s best lines, and Kline
delivers them with a world-weary, somewhat nihilistic bent that can’t help but
elicit laughter. However, it is Madigan who totally overcomes the banal
character she is asked to portray, making what could have been a side-show
religious zealot into a rounded character with heart, soul and feelings that
hide beneath the surface of her formulaic piety (her “He touched me” scene is a
wonderfully nuanced portrayal of a woman dealing with repressed sensuality).
Staged in a different manner, with a
different cast, you might come away from “Nightingale” saying, “So what?”
However, in the case of the Playhouse’s production, you don’t, and it’s all to
the credit of the marvelous cast, though lighting designer Matthew Richards
might want to take a seat out in the house – many of the instruments seem aimed
more at the audience than at the characters on stage.
No, “Nightingale” is not great
drama, for Taylor hasn’t really captured the reality of a society under siege,
threatened with total destruction, but there’s a great deal of theatrical
satisfaction to be had here, and it all is due to the skill and talent of those
who are up there on the stage. So, I turn to Seneca for a final comment: “Life's
like a play: it's not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters.”
“And a Nightingale Sang” runs
through June 27. For tickets or more information call 203-227-4177 or go to
www.westportplayhouse.org.
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