By Richard Pacheco
Lillian
Hellman was one of the most significant women playwrights in American History.
This work, “The Children’s Hour,”
proved to be quite scandalous in 1934 when it was first produced, but
seems tame and somewhat dated in contemporary times. It is a drama set in an
all-girls boarding school run by two women, Karen Wright and Martha Dobie. An
angry student, Mary Tilford, runs away from the school and to avoid being sent
back she tells her grandmother that the two headmistresses are having a lesbian
affair. The accusation proceeds to gather momentum and bring with it hoards of
tragic implications and consequences
each step growing more serious and
disastrous for all concerned, particularly the two women. While the underlying
issues are the effects of lies and ever increasing devastation it brings
without any supporting evidence, there is still the overtone of lesbianism that
makes it seem dated. At the same time the rampant intolerance seems most appropriate
to today’s headlines and political intolerance, which is so widespread today to
absurd proportions,
The Gamm
production suffers from some performances that are not on the mark and also the
directing at times misses getting the full emotional impact from the play
Madeleine
Lambert is Karen Wright, one of the owners of the school. She is engaged and
this accusation has an impact on that as well as her livelihood. She delivers a
poised performance, honest and with emotional impact.
Karen
Carpenter is Martha Dobie, the other school owner. She seems to take a while to
connect with her business partner, too distant and unaffected by almost
anything until the end. Yet there the impact is dulled due to a lack of build
up emotionally.
Grace
Viveiros is Mary an extremely difficult child with a penchant for herself out
of trouble, willing to go to extremes, no matter what the cost or devastation.
She is manipulative, devious and unscrupulous to the endth degree. She delivers
and intense and powerful performance of sheer evil and manipulation.
Casey
Seymour Kim as the somewhat distracted and offbeat aunt Lily is at times too
spastic and seems more just out of control ridiculous and a caricature.
Wendy
Overly as Mrs. Tilford a wealthy and powerful woman who loves to meddle to suit
her tastes and beliefs. She enjoys showing of her influence and power. Overly
is not exactly on target, seeming a bit distant and emotionally flat.
Benjamin
Grills as Dr. Cardin is somewhat stiff and at times unconvincing. His crying
later in the play is too false and unbelievable.
Director
Rachel Walshe cannot quite seem to get the play to deliver the kind of
emotional impact it should with the horrific climax. It seems stilted, falling
short of the emotional mark.
"The
Children's Hour" runs through Feb. 12 at the Sandra Feinstein-Gamm
Theatre, 172 Exchange St., Pawtucket. Tickets are $44-$52. Call (401) 723-4266,
or visit gammtheatre.org.
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