1J, ARTS Page 6 Friday, April 16, 1982 The Michigan Daily 'Mary Stuart' keeps its head By Elliot Jackson W ALTER- EYSSELINCK is the chairman of the LSA Theatre and Drama department. He is also the Director of the Professional Theatre Program. He is also the director of Schiller and Spender's Mary Stuart, the last production this year of the PTP's Guest Artist Series. He is also (one assumes) a man who is eager to think of himself as an in- novative interpreter of the classics. Ironically enough, however, it would seem that Eysselinck seeks to do so by ignoring those aspects of his chosen text that don't suit his purposes or fan- cy, and introducing uncalled for gim- mickry. For the most part, the production should prove an enjoyable one. The costumes are gorgeous, the set is ingenious, the lighting is subtle, the ac- tors posture gracefully and speak their lines clearly and forcefully. Eysselinck has captured very well the pomp and pageantry to which any costume piece throws itself open. What is missing from this production is a sense of urgency, a general at- mosphere of people so fraught with ten- sion, suspicion, jealousy, rage,, and- terror that they are ready to fly apart under the pressure. Emotional ex- UNITED ARTISTS FOX 375 N MAPLE VILLAGE 4 769-300 Bargain shows $2.50 Before 6 PM cesses are quashed, and those that do appear make a mockery of the proceedings more than anything else. Examples of this peculiar affliction this misapprehension of a scene's emotional impact, are colorful and varied. The queens (Maggie Fleming as Mary, Dominique Lowell as Elizabeth) were engrossing, even splendid, in their rages of wounded pride and agonies of self-justification. In the climactic scene in which they meet, however, Eysselinck make a decision to flout the explicit directions of the text. Originally, Mary says, upon seeing Elizabeth, "So be it! I will forget who I was, all that I am;" and then the original stage direction reads, "(Throwing herself on the ground before Elizabeth)." The thought of this once-proud queen wallowing before her sister sovereign appears to have been a distasteful one to the director. In Eysselinck's version Mary preserves her dignity by merely kneeling.. By this gesture Eysselinck proves that, as far as he is concerned, the director's version is more legitimate than the playwright's when it comes to determining the action on the stage. Imagine how much more impact the scene would have if we saw Mary, from willfully abasing herself to the point of lying on the ground before her sister, rise up in magnificent fury to hurl her words of proud, bitter scorn! Our in- terest in the scene would only be heightened by such extremity of the contrast. Similarly, Eysselinck decided again- st Leicester's faint when he sees Mary's head hit the block. Leicester (Gregg Henry), the favorite of Elizabeth and formerly the betrothed of Mary, is the one who has engineered the meeting between the two. The disaster that became of that en- counter prompts Elizabeth to appoint Leicester as the witness to Mary's execution. The strain of seeing his for- mer mistress, whom he has renounced to keep his slippery hold on Elizabeth's favor, on the point of having her head lopped off is too much for him; he swoons to the accompaniment of "(a loud cry from below)". In this production, however, Gregg Henry staggers off stage looking like he's got appendicitis to the accompaniment of highly-amplified gargling noises that articulate themselves into "Kyrie Eleison, Christe Eleison," before fading and becoming extremely irritating background noise. Given a choice, I would have preferred to concentrate on Elizabeth's coming to grips with the fact that she has gained the world at the expense of her soul without being distracted by noises that sounded like those one heard as a child, pressing one's ear against the pipes of a swing-set. And what was S BIAKf TOWARDS' 3:15 5:15 You'll be glad 7:20 you camel 9:4 2th CENTURY- 1:30 4:151 700 9:3.5 DOMINQUE LOWELL and Maggie Fleming appear as Queen Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots, in the Department of Theatre and Drama Guest Artist production of 'Mary Stuart'. If I meant by those weird noises anyway?, The voice of Protestant England, mur- muring against the death of Mary Stuart,:would hardly be expressing it- self in High Mass terms. Then gain, when Esselinck does choose to show us overwrought, highly- charged emotion, he allows it to degenerate into travesty. Mortimer (William Dawson), the nephew of Mary's jailer, is burning to sweep her onto a great white horse and gallop off into the sunset. His zeal to rescue her, to be her knight and possess her solely, becomes more and more frightening as his ecstacy becomes a venomous, monomanical passion which threatens to destroy what he most desires. But we don't see any of that, because Dawson's interpretation presents such a bland duplicitous, petulant, puppy- like fellow that Mortimer's aspirations of storming his uncle's castle and ab- ducting Mary by force are far more ridiculous than sublime. His climactic scene with her, wherein his declared adoration degenerates before our eyes into a lustful and jealous frenzy, became in this context a silly slap-and- tickle episode, more appropriate in its lunging and grabbing to commedia dell'arte than to historical tragedy. 0* --- 0{ 0 t , k 'AA6.1 \I / WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO SHAPE THIS SUMMER. If you have at least J4 two years of college left, you can spend six weeks a our Army ROTC Basic Camp this summer and ear approximately $600. And if youqualify, yc can enter the ROC,2- Year Program this fall anc a>receive u to $1,000 a yea But te big payoff Shappenson graduation da That's when you receive an officer's commission. So get your body in pj shape (not to mention yot. bank account). Enroll in Army ROTC For more information, contact your Professor of Military Science. EALLY ROTC. BEALLYOU CAN B CALL 76L1-24Y) $t !f and ask for u - Captain Pears at Im Du id gar. lay. )ur C. E BE. 3 son Eysselinck's greatest sins in this production, therefore, are those of not trusting the text and its explicit dire tions to guide his actions in telling the story. Consequently, the productiion was competent, colorful, and decently-- acted, but it was not what it could have been. And for those of you who find it od that I should undertake to review a'r, Guest Artist Series production and nat' mention the guest artist, let it here be noted that Barry boys is an over- bearing, arrogant, smooth Lord Burleigh, Lord High Treasurer. In short, he was practically perfect, and not at all as overpowering as he could have been; which is as much of a contA pliment to the sturdiness of the cast to him. 'jri 'i r i Pop" Quiz: When does $4.00 = $3.60? Answer: When you shop in Ulrich's art and engineering departments.. We deduct 10% from the price of all art and engineering supplies at the cash register. That's important to remember COME SEE OUR NEW ATTRACTIONS! & Rnnm Rail Rnhnt Wars ,