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SHAKSPER 2004: The Merry Wives of Windsor, Texas?
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@shaksper.net) Date: 12/10/04
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 15.2078 Friday, 10 December 2004 From: Janet Costa <janetcosta@yahoo.com> Date: Thursday, 9 Dec 2004 15:34:32 -0800 (PST) Subject: The Merry Wives of Windsor, Texas? As a New Yorker, I follow the theatre scene closely, but I read this review out of a habit I acquired at the Shakespeare Institute Library: reading anything in a newspaper that has "Shakespeare" in the title. I almost choked when I read that Michael Bogdanov, whom I have admired since his 1979 Shrew at the RSC, "contributed" to this production. Has anyone seen this production who can shed some light on what seems to me to be a bizarre choice for the Wives? From the NY Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/09/theater/reviews/09lone.html?ex=1103607867&ei=1&en=e6b81bd55cbd197d Theater Review 'Lone Star Love': Shakespeare Doesn't Need All That There Fancy Talk December 9, 2004 By CHARLES ISHERWOOD Howdy, partner, and get outta my seat! Patrons at "Lone Star Love," a new musical adaptation of "The Merry Wives of Windsor" set deep in the heart of you know where, may need to assert themselves to settle in at the John Houseman Theater. But if you do enter to find a Stetson-wearing cast member jawing away with neighbors, blocking access to your assigned place, you can always mosey on down to the stage for a spell, where a down-home barbecue feast has been arrayed: hot dogs and chili, potato salad and corn muffins, lemonade and beer. But it would be wise not to overindulge in starchy foods, since the musical that follows this folksy welcoming ritual is not without its own soporific effects. Corn and sugar also turn out to be essential ingredients in this sweet-tempered, cheerfully hokey production. Shakespeare's fat knight, here known as Sgt. John Falstaff (Jay O. Sanders), arrives in Windsor, Tex., having fled west after the collapse of the Confederate Army. In short order he's embroiled with Aggie Ford (Beth Leavel) and Margaret Anne Page (Stacia Fernandez), the sassy wives of a pair of cattle ranchers. Thump! Into the laundry basket he goes. Plop! Into the river. Meanwhile, Miss Anne Page (Julie Tolivar) encounters her own troubles on the merry road to romance. Daddy wants to lasso the sheriff's dimwitted nephew to march his daughter down the aisle, but Mama is inclined toward the local doctor, a mustachioed Frenchman (Drew McVety). Will Miss Anne evade their designs long enough to get hitched to the handsome stranger in town, a "yodeling cowboy" called Fenton (Clarke Thorell)? John L. Haber, who conceived and adapted the show, has set Shakespeare's comedy in the Wild West in cute but hardly revelatory fashion, making the occasional coy or corny allusion to the original. ("How dost thou?" asks Fenton of Harriett D. Foy's Miss Quickly, who has a feather duster in hand. Tee-hee.) The founder of a children's theater in North Carolina, Mr. Haber has pitched most of the comedy at a tween-friendly level, with that sissy Frenchman sporting a mighty silly accent, for instance. This play is not among Shakespeare's most prized comedies. (It was reportedly whipped up on commission as a favor to Queen Elizabeth I, who couldn't get enough of naughty old Falstaff.) But it has proved oddly seductive to composers, most famously Verdi, who refashioned it for his own sublime purposes. Although it's hardly fair to draw comparisons between "Lone Star Love" and the celebrated "Falstaff," it is worth noting that Verdi didn't merely plaster standard-format arias across the play's surface; he created a true musical comedy. "Lone Star Love" boasts a tangy country-and-blues score by Jack Herrick, artistic director of the Red Clay Ramblers, who is joined onstage by his fellow Ramblers Clay Buckner and Chris Frank. Together they play Falstaff's famous sidekicks. But as melodious as Mr. Herrick's songs are - "Count on My Love," a lilting duet for Fenton and Miss Page, is a real honey - they essentially adorn or interrupt the action rather than propel it forward. With the musical's score and its book proceeding on parallel tracks, the show tends to dawdle when it should sprint. The cast certainly can't be faulted for a lack of energy. With accents as broad as the Rio Grande, they romp, stomp, sashay, sneer or snarl with an exuberance that skirts caricature or embraces it, depending on their characters' comic purposes. Ms. Leavel and Ms. Fernandez are fine singers, their contrasting voices blending harmoniously in a duet denouncing the foolish ways of men. Mr. Sanders makes a jolly victim of their feminine wiles, although Falstaff is not a dominant presence here. As Fenton, the laid-back Mr. Thorell, with a sweet, light tenor, pleases particularly by trying less hard to please. And the Red Clay Ramblers, taking part in the drama in their thin dramatic guise or simply supplying expert fiddling and picking from the side of the stage, are always a pleasure to hear. Staged with care by Michael Bogdanov, on Derek McLane's airy set dominated by a big barn door that slides open to reveal cloudy expanses of sky, "Lone Star Love" is the kind of pleasant, competent, thoroughly innocuous show that somehow leaves you with an itch for the offensively bad. 'Lone Star Love, or the Merry Wives of Windsor, Texas' Through Jan. 9 [ . . . ] _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@shaksper.net The S H A K S P E R Web Site <http://www.shaksper.net> DISCLAIMER: Although SHAKSPER is a moderated discussion list, the opinions expressed on it are the sole property of the poster, and the editor assumes no responsibility for them.
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