Review |
Live theatre always demands a collaboration between the
audience and the performers. No matter how elaborate a stage set may be,
we viewers always agree to pretend we’re watching real people doing real
things in real places. Sometimes a playwright relies on this contract to
take his audience to fantastic places: Oz, Wonderland, or, in the
fantasy voyage, A Wrinkle In Time, to far-off planets, both good
and evil. The play, adapted by John Glore from Madeleine L’Engle’s
children’s classic novel plays at Sutter Street Theatre weekends through
July 17.
Grace Mauro is riveting as the brilliant but awkward
Meg Murry, whose father has disappeared on a super-secret government
mission. The weird lady down the block, Mrs. Whatsit, might be able to
help her reach him, understanding that she must travel through time and
space using a process called a “tesseract,” which is a very risky
undertaking.
Accompanying Meg will be her eccentric little brother
Charles Wallace (he reads minds), played with great authority and charm
by one of the best young actors in the area, Sean Stewart. (Seeing the
change in Charles Wallace when the evil force IT takes over his mind
late in the play is very creepy.) Also along for the adventure is Meg’s
timid friend Calvin (Caiden Falco), who deftly adds a comic touch as a
regular kid who surprises Meg and himself by demonstrating real courage
when things get especially scary.
The remainder of the dozen or so characters are played
by three actors. Mrs. Whatsit, a sort of whimsical bag lady who also
appears as the evil Man With Red Eyes, was played opening weekend by
stage manager Jennie Vaccaro filling in for Linda Taylor who was ill.
Vaccaro, carrying a script, was excellent. The children’s mother was
played by Felicia Slechta, who also was very comical as Mrs. Who, and
later appeared as a faceless but friendly being referred to as Aunt
Beast. Keven Branson was forceful as the voice of Mrs. Which, a glowing
ball, and as Mr. Murry, the father, and in numerous brief parts.
How do you present on stage a tale that shows its
characters zooming through space and time, confronting aliens, and
facing threats on several planets? Shakespeare once told his audience,
“Let us… on your imaginary forces
work,” and the playwright and the director Michael Coleman ask the same
of their audience. The unobtrusive narration by the actors and the
minimal set of folding screens and boxes skillfully moved as the action
takes place, accompanied by Coleman’s unworldly sound and light effects,
help us imagine we are seeing strange worlds.
Many adults like me will remember the novel with
pleasure from their childhood reading. But those unfamiliar with the
book who can immerse themselves in a great story well told, and young
viewers who enjoy being taken on thrilling adventures, will find A
Wrinkle in Time a delightful afternoon of theatre, one in which they
participate as well as watch. |