By
Richard Pacheco
The Gamm Theatre brings George
Orwell’s dark classic “1984” to grim and grimy life onstage in a production
that is compelling, riveting and uncommonly dark despite its occasional touches
of humor. George Orwell labored his entire life against the totalitarian state
in his works and ironically enough his name is now associated with that dark,
menacing body politic.
Written in 1949, Orwell takes this
dark and hopeless world to new depths. Here, the state is everything and
individuals are mere pawns, their feelings, thoughts, and even memories are
disposable. Dare to challenge the party
line and you put your life and mental well being in jeopardy. It is a dark
world or menace and despair, a world of constant betrayals and not knowing who
to trust, a place were children turn in their parents and lovers turn on each
other under torture and relentless indoctrination.
Big Brother, that omnipresent
specter of a father figure is always present. Think what you are told or else,
you will be cured followed by an inevitable death, a hopeless state with non
escape. With Doublethink the language shrinks in words and meanings, always
simplifying to eliminate nuances of meaning.
Jim O’Brien is Winston Smith a man
on a journey of rebellion in spite of himself.
He find himself slipping into rebellion when he buys a journal to write
his thought in, away from the prying eyes of omnipresent monitor which oversees
them all. Mr. O’Brien is elegant and awkward in his journey to individualism
and love in a world which tolerates neither. It’s a finely honed performance,
full of alternating confidence and doubt, of hope and despair.
The other actors play multiple
roles, from the almost Greek style Chorus of narrators to many of Winston’s
colleagues in the ministry where Doublethink prevails and the Thought Police
oversee everything.
Georgia Cohen is Julia and a host
of other characters. As Julia she is Winston’s love interest, a young woman of
vitality and daring, passionate and determined. She captures a fine blend between
gentleness and vigor. It is a sharply
etched performance as she follows or perhaps leads Winston down the dangerous
path to individuality.
Richard Noble likewise does
multiple roles. At one point he is the ever passionate, stalwart party
supporter, Parsons. Parsons is a man who at least outwardly believes everything
along party lines with vigor and conviction. He is also O’Brien who might be
high up in the resistance, a man who allies himself with Winston. Mr. Noble
offers some well defined differences in his varied characters, all portrayed
with zest and conviction.
Casey Seymour Kim is also one of
the narrators and serves as Winston’s wife and mother. She shifts between each
character with grace and ease. As Winston’s wife she is aloof and distant. As
his mother she is warm and engaging.
Rounding out the cast is Jed
Hancock-Brainerd who is a narrator, a technician and the ever elusive
Goldstein, leader of the resistance. He is energetic and ardent in his roles.
Director Tony Estrella keeps the Nick
Lane adaptation moving along rapid and with
disturbing effects throughout and with its share of humor as well in this dark,
dismal world. Some of the narrator movements are almost choreography and highly
effective.
Jessica
Hills set is just right. It is a
mixture of technology and decay, flat screen televisions and decrepit plaster
walls, crumbling like individuality. Marilyn Salvatore’s costumes are the right
mixture of totalitarian bland. The lighting by Matthew Terry and sound by
Charles Cofone, video by Mike Jones, and sound and video design by David Roy bring
the final elements to bring this vividly to life. All these elements and aptly
and impressively blended together into a coherent whole.
This is a sharp and vivid
production, extremely well done on all fronts and getting a well deserved
standing ovation at the end. While the message might be a bit
overdone in its message, it is still powerful and lasting in its effect.
It is a bold statement, still after
so man years, and one particularly striking in our current country with things
like the Patriot Act, and NDAA which allows the political assassination of
Americans with no evidence whatsoever and no trial. It is a grim reminder to us what can happen. As
Benjamin Franklin once wrote, those who would sacrifice their freedom for security
will eventually lose both.
It will be presented at the Gamm
Theatre, 172 Exchange Street, Pawtucket
until May 17. You can buy tickets online at: http://gammtheatre.org/
or call the box office at: 401-723-4266. Ticket prices from $34 to premium
reserved for $42. Note that convenience fees range from $3.75 to $4.75
depending on performance.
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