The
Theatre de la Ville (Paris)’s production of Ionesco’s Rhinoceros
played for three nights at the BAM Opera House last week. In Rhinoceros,
Ionesco’s main character — a sad sack hung over Everyman named Bérenger — watches
his fellow villagers one by one become mindless, soulless beasts, of their own
free will. Tomes have been written about
the meanings of this allegorical staple of the absurdist theatre. This production won’t help you understand
them.
Somehow
it’s much easier to watch French film than French theatre — the superscript
changer had trouble keeping up with the very brisk French being spoken and, all
too often, shouted onstage. Director Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota had his entire
cast at the same level — loud — from beginning to end, so there wasn’t much of
a big deal, aurally, as they became rhinoceroses.
The
first act was just flat — I seriously thought the director had no depth
perception — barely introducing Ionesco’s main character, Bérenger as played sweetly
but dully by Serge Maggiani, before
the shouting began. Bérenger’s friend,
Jean, as played by Hugues Quester,
was an annoying Johnny One Note. An intervention
that consists merely of denigrating the subject — Bérenger — is not interesting
theatre. When the actors and designers
let us know something rather large, heavy, and unusual was running by, it could
as easily have been a tank as a rhinoceros.
Rhinoceros runs wild in the streets. (c) 2012 Jean Louis Fernandez |
The
second act had some fun contributions from the scenic designer (Yves Collet), and that helped the
actors engage since they were physically discombobulated by floors rising (shades of Titanic). As humans slowly changed to rhinoceroses,
their physical interpretations of the change were quite interesting, starting
with the loud Jean. Unfortunately his
standard bellow did not help the audience to know when his transformation was beginning. Still, it’s an effective scene, with Bérenger
doing his best to distance himself from his frightening friend. Bit by bit, the entire village turns, although
we only witness two more: Bérenger’s
colleague (and rival in love) Dudard (Philippe
Demarle) and his dreamgirl Daisy (Céline
Carrère), who both make the transformation from human to rhinoceros appear
more lightening than weighty, as if the simplicity of following indiscriminately
is communicated to their bodies as well as their minds.
Serge Maggiani as Berenger and Celine Carrere as Daisy. (c) 2012 Jean Louis Fernandez. |
The
closing moments of the play are quite effective, when Bérenger is truly alone
and determined not to join the pack of his lazy-minded compatriots, without
showing a definitive resolution. But the
director’s best idea was not from the play.
The evening began when Serge
Maggiani spoke a prelude in front of the curtain that was an excerpt from
Ionesco’s only novel, The Hermit. This was a really good idea, featuring
similar themes to those that would follow in Rhinoceros.
However….the rest of the production let us down. I’m sticking with the late actor/director/teacher Herbert Berghof’s “golden words” on
this one. That is, if you shout, you’d
better have a damned good reason.
~ Molly Matera,
signing off to re-read the play. En
anglais, s’il vous plaît.
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