The Caucasian Chalk Circle

Date: 
Sunday, March 13th, 2011
Grusha baby

Ladies and gentlemen, brace yourself for a long rich ethnic story which will surprise you with its unexpected twists and turns like a modern suspense thriller. Written by German playwright and anti-war activist Bertolt Brecht and directed by Adjunct Professor at the Tisch School of Arts Anya Saffir, the play will keep you guessing, among other things, about its name.  Really, why the chalk circle?

The play opens with a dispute between two Soviet communes, the Galinsk goat farm and the Rosa Luxemburg collective, over who is to own a piece of land after the end of the Nazi's occupation. But then a group of actors and singers arrive, and, like the famous Arabic classic A Thousand and One Arabian Nights, in which one fable tells another, the play drops us into medieval Gruzinia (Georgia), in the midst of a mutiny and armed conflict. Prince Kazbeki, backed by the Ironshirts, murders the governor, Georgi Abashvili, whose fleeing wife Natella is more concerned with picking out her wardrobe than packing her baby son - and so little Michael gets left behind. Grusha, a young maid, who had just gotten engaged to Simon the soldier, finds the baby and runs away with him, saving the boy from the Ironshirts, as her fiancé leaves to fight the war.

The infant puts Grusha at odds with society: she cannot reveal Michael's identity because the Ironshirts are after him.  "He's mine," she yells as she collapses into her brother's arms exhausted and sick from the winter cold after crossing the mountains.  The brother's wife is not sympathetic - an unwed mother is an embarrassment, not to mention two extra mouths to feed.  Yielding to the pressure, Grusha agrees to marry a dying peasant to become a respectable widow - but the man miraculously recovers after the wedding. Thus, Grusha finds herself married with child and without a clue as to how she'd ever explain this to Simon who, hopefully, will come back from the war. But life has another ugly surprise for her:  Natella returns to claim her son - her key to the estate. Can the dispute be settled with a chalk circle?

azdak

Every actor in this energetic well-directed cast plays at least three different roles, changing hats, dresses and historical times with remarkable ease and flair. The usage of stage sets is impressive: simple yet sufficient structures quickly transform the stage from a mansion to a peasant shack and from a court into a mountain road. Dramatically orchestrated and touching is the scene is which fleeing Grusha crosses a broken bridge over a two thousand foot deep abyss disregarding a group of locals who warn her the old wood won't hold her weight.  Weaved naturally into the plot, the songs and music by Cormac Bluestone give it that special ethnic feel as if we had been invited to a traditional Gruzinian wedding where the old fashioned entertainers amuse the guests with their tales.  

Compliment to director Anya Saffir, this drama never drops its intensity yet it makes us laugh quite a few times - at people's stupidity, greed, or self-centeredness.  "[In this play Brecht] invites us to take a closer look at those small choices we make in life," Saffir says in her interview,  "and how those choices impact the life of others." Like a great old book rediscovered in grandmother's trunk, this production is a delicious revival of an almost forgotten classic, and definitely a treat.  

To watch the itnerview with Anya Saffir, click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dnZkTE1mfsk

To watch the interview with Cormac Bluestone, click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMqf6zsXAr0&NR=1

 

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