Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Not Quite a Month, but Three Hours

I generally make it a point not to review the mainstage shows at Marymount Manhattan College. Too many politics attached. Too many professors involved. But when one comes along that makes an impression on me the way A Month in the Country did, I have to sing its praises. That’s what this website is for, after all!

The proper place to start is probably the play itself, by Ivan Turgenev in a translation by Brian Friel. It’s a three-hour Russian piece labeled as a “comedy.” As we all may be well-aware, those Russians have a funny definition of the word “comedy,” but let that rest. The last time MMC saw a three-hour Russian comedy it was the raucous Inspector General two years ago. Inspector received a mixed reaction from the students and faculty, though I’m probably not the best person to comment on the quality of the show, as I worked on the production. A woman sitting outside the theatre asked me before we went in if I thought A Month in the Country would be anything like The Inspector General. No matter anyone’s opinion of one or the other, the answer to that is decidedly: no. A Month in the Country could be closer compared to a Neil Simon family drama. The play deals with Natalya Petrovna (Stephanie Card) who is torn between the man she loves, old friend Michel Rakitin (William Farrell), and the man she lusts after, her son’s tutor Aleksey Balyayev (Nicholas Vorderman), and keep it all a secret from her husband Arkady (Taylor Miller). The complication begins—haha—when it seems there is a potential rival for Aleksey’s affections: Natalya’s 17-year-old ward Vera (Melissa Benoist). All eyes are on Natalya as she navigates between the men in her life while keeping her own eye on Vera.

But, to the production. Rob Dutiel’s stained-glass window set suggests that the family within the house is as fragile as the glass surrounding them, even the powerhouse Natalya, who may not be as strong as she seems. Kyle McGahan’s lighting perfectly compliments Dutiel’s sets, while adding to the atmosphere of the Russian countryside. Kirche Leigh Zeile’s costumes, while not what any of us would wear during the summertime, perfectly evoke the lightness of a depressing Russian comedy. And, to top it off, the fluid staging of the actors by director Lisa Rothe makes this production one of the best I’ve seen on Marymount Manhattan College’s stage.

There are those of us who have followed Stephanie Card’s performances since freshman year, and I’m sure those who have been following even longer. Still, how could anyone be prepared for the whirlwind performance she gave when Hurricane Natalya swept in? Card’s Natalya could give The Graduate’s Mrs. Robinson a run for her money in a role portrayed on the professional stage by the likes of Helen Mirren and Harriet Harris. She gives us a woman who will sever any and all ties to get what she wants in the moment, which of course will leave her with very little in the end, and we follow every step and hang on every word. She is a force to be reckoned with and, eventually, the cause of her own downfall. (I told you those Russians had weird ideas concerning “comedy.”)

Of the many people who share the stage—which Card rarely leaves—three stand out the most, both in terms of their relationship to Natalya, and their ability to hold their own against her. William Farrell has been seen many times on the Marymount stage in both mainstage and student directed productions. It would seem almost as if all of his training and experience thus far has lead him directly to this production in which he must stand up to the force of nature which is Card’s Natalya. Playing the rival for Natalya’s affections, Nick Vorderman offers a delightfully double-handed performance as Aleksey Balyayev—at ease with the young Vera, and uncomfortable around the brazen Natalya. His shift in the second act is a twist in the plot, but a natural progression from whence he came.

Still, the break-out performance of the year would have to be Melissa Benoist, a freshman at MMC, as the 17-year-old Vera, who gives us a genuinely touching scene opposite Ms. Card in the first act, and a triumphantly defiant scene in the second. Her shift from youthful curiosity to cynical maturity, keeping in mind that this is within the span of a month, is heartbreaking. (Remember about those Russians and the word “comedy”?)

There are some characters on hand to remind us that through all of the bleak Russian pathos, this is still a comedy. This mainly comes from Chip Rodgers as the malapropping German tutor Herr Shaaf, Seth James as the quack doctor Shpigelsky, and Tyler Neale as the Russian 40-year-old Virgin Bolshintsov.

The rest of the cast does an admirable job, with surprising dramatic turns from two otherwise comical characters in the second act. Taylor Miller as Arkady, the bumbling husband of Natalya, comes out with great sympathy in a lovely scene opposite Antoinette Henry playing his mother, a woman who’s never afraid to speak her mind. This may be the only scene in the play where no one is lying or manipulating, and the two actors play it with heartfelt sincerity.

And even though it seems like just about everyone loses out by the end of A Month in the Country, the final moment gives us Tyler Neale with a triumphant yet ridiculous grin, reminding us that we are supposed to laugh at the events of the evening. It’s a comedy.


A Month in the Country is no longer running.