Tag Archives: robert dahlstrom

“The Price” Isn’t Right

Attention must be paid to the set dressing.

Arthur Miller’s The Price is set in an attic, that place where we put all the things we don’t want but with which we cannot part. The characters that populate this purgatory have come to negotiate a price on their history–they are selling the furniture. It’s a perfect setting for an Arthur Miller play and in ACT’s current production (through June 22nd) the set also nears perfection.

The Price is one of those plays in which resentments fester beneath the surface until circumstances force them to break out and someone says “let me tell you what really happened.” The script is solid, and respected, if not of Miller’s finest, but in this production, it’s the clutter of furnishings and props that steal the show. The acting and direction, on the other hand, leave something to be desired.

The play centers on Victor (Charles Leggett) the son of a millionaire, who went bankrupt in The Great Depression. Victor’s uncles took over the house, and let their brother live in the attic with all his stuff. Victor dropped out of college and became a cop to support his father. Victor’s brother, Walter, (Peter Lohnes) stayed in school, became a wealthy doctor and sent a little money home to dad.

When our play begins, long after the father’s death, the family is being forced to sell the contents of the attic before the house is demolished. The conflict between the good, happy, and poor Victor and the rich, flawed, and dysfunctional Walter is inevitable and largely predictable, despite some twists and detours in the layers of revelation. However the play belongs to Victor’s wife, Esther, (Anne Allgood) who is the only one who experiences any real change in the play. Unfortunately we don’t see that change occur. We know it happens because the script tells us but the actors show us nothing.

The characters are iconic, almost archetypal: Doctor, Cop, Housewife, (and Furniture Dealer). There is subtlety in the script but this production gives it no support, to say nothing of drawing out further nuance. Rather the complexities of the characters as written are dulled by the actors’ performance. They unfailingly aim for the obvious, retard their pacing, and play emotions instead of actions.

Lohnes is doctor-as-snake-oil-salesman. Yes, Victor says he doesn’t believe Walter but it’s a miracle anyone can, including the audience. He creates the problem of playing a bad actor: the line between playing bad acting and just badly acting is too fine for trifling.

Peter Silbert gives us the furniture dealer, Gregory Solomon as Solomon The Wise, but also Solomon the Borschty shtick-monger. Nonetheless Silbert tends to blow some energy into a play in which the actors rarely seem to be listening to one another.

Leggett employs his paunch and pate to easy effect along with his standard folksy, simple guy accent. While Alyssa Keene is cited as dialect coach she seems to have worked only with Silbert (who still needs some practice). Leggett gets to pull out the stops in Victor’s big emotional moment. It’s good craft and affecting, but that moment feels utterly disconnected from everything around it.

Allgood has the toughest role here. She doesn’t get to indulge in histrionics or interesting character bits and she endures casual misogyny from men who are always telling her to sit down, be quiet, or be more supportive, and calling her “kid”. On top of that her character embodies the dramatic action of the play. Unfortunately we miss that action entirely.

While the arena staging creates its own special challenges Victor Pappas’s direction inevitably found Allgood hunched over protectively at key moments, effectively shutting out the audience. All we could see was that Esther had a view of the world, listened to conversation, and came away with a new view of the world.

So, about that set; Robert Dahlstrom gives us a wonderful NYC skylight-crowned ceiling, high above the stage and a farrago of furnishings, much of it matched to precise descriptions in the set. Also excellent is Brendan Patrick Hogan’s sound design. The music coming out of what appears to be a wind up phonograph, despite its rather electrical whine, is authentic and spot-on.

That nuance and complexity we wanted in the acting—we find it in Alex Berry’s lights and Rose Pederson’s costumes. The costumes in particular demonstrated excellent research and execution in character, and circumstance. Let’s hope future ACT productions will learn something from her.

The Tales of Hoffmann, An Operatic Delight

Olympia (Norah Amsellem) and Spalanzani (Steven Cole) in The Tales of Hoffmann, 2014

There’s something just zany and delightful about Seattle Opera’s recent The Tales of Hoffmann. As a Speight send-off at the end of the season, it pulls out all the theatrical magic stops with fire, fog, puppetry, and even a shout-out to the Czech tradition of black light theater. It smacks of Berlinesque staging with a soupçon  of French absurdist theatre combined with the velvet tones of what either are, or should be, world-class vocal talent. All those words to say: boy, does it work.

Musically, the production is one of the best I’ve heard yet in my nearly ten years of coming to the Opera. Orchestrally, the score is well handled by conductor Yves Abel. The orchestra does not overwhelm the singers as some are want to do, and the strings section in particular does an excellent job partnering with the vocal talent to produce something pure and emotionally moving.

Tenor William Burden succeeds at playing the love sick poet, Hoffmann, who tells three stories of how he’s fallen in love with a various iterations of an operatic diva, the formidable Norah Amsellem. It’s worth mentioning that while William Burden, of course, excels vocally and convincingly plays the lovelorn hero, he has nothing on soprano Amsellem who completes what can only be called a vocal marathon not for the faint of heart, playing four characters and mastering the fiendishly difficult “Doll Aria.”

However, Kate Lindsey, who plays Hoffmann’s long-suffering Muse, elevates the production to another level. Not only is her singing flawless, the kind that gives you chills – but she can really act. Pants roles are sometimes awkward and stodgy, but Lindsey manages to convince the audience that she’s just one of the guys while under cover; her ability to switch so fluidly from femme fatale to Hoffmann’s partner in holy bromance is a spectacular feat just on its own, no incredible vocal chops required.

Maybe I’m revealing my hand too early in this reviewing process, but I am a sucker for a good bass. Nicolas Cavallier excels as various dastardly villains and gets a side-stepping, cane-twirling number in the first act to boot. I say a hearty “oui, oui” to Arthur Woodly’s impeccable French diction, unrivalled by anyone else in the production. Diction makes a difference, particularly to those of us sitting up in the hinterlands (full disclosure: I bought my own tickets to this one). Major applause too for Seattle Opera employing some locals from the Pacific Northwest in this production: Jonathan Silvia, Eric Neuville, and MishaMyznikov all perform up to par with the imported talent.

From a production standpoint, this opera excels almost like none other I have seen from Seattle Opera (granted, I’ve never been lucky enough to afford Ring tickets). Unlike many of Seattle Opera’s previous productions in recent financially-shaky seasons, Tales of Hoffmann is a truly full production that works; it dazzles with all the special musical and theatrical touches. True to the whimsical and witty style of the music and story, director Chris Alexander works in any trick he can get his hands on – tromp l’oeil painting, secret doors, magic windows, dancing beer bottles, quick scene changes that actually get applause all on their own.

The genius of this particular production is that his colorful choices actually fit the character of the music, the spirit of the story, and reinforce the underlying argument of the libretto, that art is, in the end, its own reward. I love the fact that set designer Robert Dahlstrom picks up on the meta nature of the storyline and then incorporates this into his design elements – the glorious golden proscenium arch is part form, part function. It not only reminds viewers once again that we’re viewing a story within a story, but it’s also a story about the nature of storytelling itself. We’re forced to confront our own participation with the metanarrative through what’s probably elaborate paper-mache of some sort, and that is the true transformational power of Hoffmann’s art at work.

Literal and figurative props must be given to backstage hands for handling the insane amount of physical pieces that Chris Alexander always employs. With the exception of a slightly creaky bar entrance in the third act, things worked seamlessly; boats arrive on stage, puppets are constructed out of merely shoes and cloth, and the entire interior of the Palais Garnier makes an appearance. Particular attention is also paid to the lighting and visualizations in this performance. While Chris Alexander occasionally likes to make bizarro lighting choices (he favors resolving shows with acid colors and chorus appearances), Robert Wierzel convinced him into some rich hues and dramatic moments which helped underscore many of the Muse’s arias.

What I particularly appreciate about Mr. Alexander’s work is that he is able to think outside of the traditional “Stand and Sing” model of staging that bores the ever-living daylights out of us young 20-somethings for whom classical music can occasionally feel like eating vegetables. Green, horrid, kale-like vegetables. I took a friend with me to the opera, and though she has little to no experience with the art form, she enjoyed it and was surprised by the amount of humor and impressive staging. (She’d like to specifically congratulate the singer with the most incredible robot walk which kept her laughing throughout the first tale).

All in all, this is a colorful, creative, and theatrically lavish production that is a joy to watch and hear.

{The Tales of Hoffman plays at the Seattle Opera through May 17. Tickets and more information can be found here.}