By Richard Pacheco
Cape
Cod Community College’s
current production of the classic Aristophanes play “Lysistrata” is a merry
raunchy romp, full of vitality and sheer fun. Originally performed in classical
Athens in 411 BC, it is a comic
account of one woman's extraordinary mission to end the Peloponnesian War.
Lysistrata persuades the women of Greece
to withhold sexual privileges from their husbands and lovers as a means of
forcing the men to negotiate peace — a strategy, however, that inflames
the battle between the sexes. The play is notable for being an early exposé of
sexual relations in a male-dominated society. This translation by Douglass
Parker is raucous fun, full of double entendres, sexual innuendoes and jokes
galore, which the director aptly calls the Mel Brooks version, not at all
academic but full of sheer fun able to deftly trample boundaries of good taste
at a single bound.
Kimberly
Monteiro is Lysistrata, the woman with a mission to make love not war. She
struggles to rally the women behind her cause to cut off all sex from the men
until they end the war, period and most succinctly. It is an uphill battle, one
fraught with assorted difficulties but she is determined. Monteiro is solid in
the role, full of energy and enthusiasm. She offers a strong presence, a woman
of sheer will and concentration bent on victory and the end of the war no
matter what it takes.
She has a
bevy of determined women with her, some varying in their dedication and
enthusiasm for the cause but still willing to contribute to the best of their
abilities.
The men who
try to thwart this plan are many and just as dedicated until the lack of sex
starts taking its toll on all of them eventually ending with them stuck at
attention to the task at mind.
Dustin
Martin is the commissioner of public safety whose loyalty and dedication to the
cause of war are not in question. But he is a man and eventually the battle of
the sexes takes its toll on him as well and he succumbs to the pressure to
relent in war. Martin is delightful as the commissioner, full of bluster and at
times pompous, a loyal city father dedicated to the cause of the current war.
Ben Gutman
is Kinesias, a renown warrior who loves his wife even more than war so it turns
out. When he returns for battle for a conjugal visit and his wife refuses him
sex, it paridly brings about his change of heart to embracing the new cause of
peace and put an end to his priapism.
Gutman is hilarious as he battles his wife’s refusal and his painful
condition. He makes the most of double entendres and sexual comments to very
funny effect.
Emily
Entwhisle is Myrrhine, his wife. She is winning as the temptress, who
shamelessly teases and tantalizes her husband but refuses to surrender to his
advances, no matter how long it has been unless he supports giving up the war.
Cameron
Hall is Kinesias’ slave, a man dedicated to his mater determined to help him
solve his marital plight as bet he can. Hall is a hoot as the slave, full of
energy and enthusiasm.
Special
mention has to be made of the Spartan Ambassadors who sound like big time
hillbilly rednecks. They are outrageously funny with the twang in their voices
and their rough and ready presence.
Of the
women, the names ones and not the choruses, Emily Tullock, Emily Entwhisle.
Taryn Van Esslestyn and Liz Bent are sheer delights with their various antics
and quirks as they come over to the cause espoused by Lysistrata.
The fairly
good sized choruses of men and women offer distinctive personalities as well as
blending into homogeneous wholes when needed.
Director
Elizabeth Rapoza keeps everything moving at a merry raunchy pace, the sex jokes
and antics running amok with a sense of raw energy and sheer abandon. It is a large cast with both male and female
choruses and she handles their movement with skill and grace.
The set by
Guy Trudeau is excellent, with two Greek style buildings on either side and a
temple entrance at rear of the stage with a frieze atop which is elegant and
classic in style and beauty.
It is a vigorous,
rambunctious good time, rich in sexual remarks, situations and double
entendres. Aristophanes would have been happy to see it.
“Lysistrata”
at Tilden Arts
Center, Cape
Cod Community College,
2240 Ivanaugh Road, West Barnsatable,
MA n 508-362-2131, April 9-11, 17 and 18,
24, 25 at 7 pm, April 11, 18, 25 at 2 pm. $15 general admission, free with student
ID.
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