THEATRE/ARTS & CULTURE
EMILIA GALOTTI - Stratford Shakespeare Festival of Canada | EMILIA GALOTTI - Stratford Shakespeare Festival of Canada |
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| Written by Kindah Mardam Bey | |
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Production:
Emilia Galotti
By:
Author:
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
Director:
Michael Thalheimer
Principle
Actors: Nina Hoss, Ingo Hulsmann, Sven Lehmann, Peter Pagel, Barbara
Schnitzler, Henning Vogt, Regine Zimmermann
Where:
Venue: Avon
Theatre
Run:
November 6th – 9th (a touring show since 2001, so check
to see if it will be performed in your area)
Notes: This
is a German play with English surtitles.
Reviewed
By: Kindah Mardam Bey (
Shakespeare
shows us that plays do not lose the relevancy they possess over the mere
turning of time; after all we still ask the questions Hamlet did. In the
shaping of time and history, some plays are just as relevant as ever, and the
Stratford Shakespeare Festivals final play of the season (performed by a
traveling tour from the Deutsches Theater Berlin), Emilia Galotti,
originally produced in 1772, can be both modern and post-modern at the same
time.
Like all
nymphets of literature, Emilia Galotti has made a prince fall in love with her
from a one-night encounter at a soiree. The prince, Hettore Gonzaga, is so moved
by his passion, he plots a way of getting his beloved Emilia, discarding his
already relationship with Orsina, and pre-empting Emilia’s marriage to Count Appiani
which is to take place on the very day the play is set. Emilia’s parents, Orsina,
and Marinelli (Hettore’s chamberlain) all play pivotal parts in the play. Emilia’s
Fiancée, Count Appiani, makes a brief appearance before his untimely death that
is the coil which springs this tragic story into motion.
Emilia
Galotti makes a stunning entrance for the onset of the play, as she walks
steadily towards the very front of the stage as two lit flames follow behind her
along her walkway, which are diminished by a cascade of showering fireworks
behind Emilia.
The set was
poignantly barren, with a plain white wall at the pinnacle of a forced
perspective set that was flanked by wide, light-brown panels. The costumes were
clean as the men dressed in suits and the women dressed in minimalist outfits
that one might have pegged a Vera Wang influence on. The void set and costumes
brought the plays story to present day, but hailed a futuristic feel as well in
tow. Definitely, the music thrust the viewers into the post-modernist feeling
as the theme music was predominantly a perpetual plucking of violin strings,
with the occasional sweeping overture from the violin in its truest use.
Aside from
the costumes and set, even though the production was in German with surtitles,
it was easily the performances that made this version of Emilia Galotti so
compelling. Regine Zimmermann as Emilia was enigmatic, as was her Mother,
performed by Barbara Schnitzler. Much of the plays comedy came from Ingo
Hulsmann as Marinelli, who was a persistent go-between throughout the plot; he
both did the Prince’s bidding, and clearly defined his own part within the
story as well. Orsina, the scorned woman, played by Ingo Hulsmann was both
beautiful, and aptly cold. Both Emilia’s Father and her fiancée, Peter Pagel
and Henning Vogt respectively, had brief but pertinent roles that they made
full of depth. However, my complete awe goes to Sven Lehmann as the Prince, who
is enraptured by the ideal of love and somewhat captivated by his own image in such
an expression. Lehmann was delightfully watchable throughout. The whole cast
played equally off each other, to pull a stunning performance together. Each
performer appeared to have an awesome understanding of emotion unhinged.
Much of the
Emilia Galotti was revealed through performance as opposed to language,
and some fantastic existentialist humour, and intense emotion, was riveting to
watch in this bourgeois tragedy. Emilia Galotti was Shakespearean in its
‘oomph’ but Nietzsche in its form.
Here is a trailer for the production of Emilia Galotti, actually using the cast members I have mentioned in this review:
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