Monday, September 3, 2012

Review: The Woman in Black- Stage Happenings

THE WOMAN IN BLACK

By: Robert Lilly

http://www.stagehappenings.com/Robert_Lilly/reviews/_2012/womaninblack.php




One of the longest running and most successful ventures in the history of the London theatre scene has now been brought to Oxnard. The Woman in Black is a fascinating and ambitious undertaking presented with a unique style of storytelling seldom seen in Ventura County.

The majority of shows produced in area fall into a predictable pattern of production and presentation. The Woman in Black, currently on stage at the Elite Theatre Company in Oxnard, does not fall in to that convention. The tale is told in a distinctive and creative way that exposes local audiences to one of the traits that made this show a long running sensation on the British Stage.

At the onset, we find an awkward and nervous “actor” (Terry Fishman) in the throes of reading aloud from pages of a manuscript that he himself has penned. Now voicing it for the first time, he is urged on to better his performance by a young professional actor and director (Curtis Cline). Soon we learn that both men are in a theatre with the shared goal of telling the story of Arthur Kipps to the public, but with very different motives. The younger sees the deep dramatic value of the yarn, both as a human experience and as a haunting ghost story; whereas the writer of the tale wishes only to unburden his soul of the events he lived by speaking them in a public forum. As the play within the play unfolds, we see what is ostensibly a final dress rehearsal of a multi layered autobiographical play that the two men have prepared for public consumption in the local London theatre district. In their play, Cline plays the part of the Kipps as a younger man, and Fishman takes on the roles of the various people that Kipps met along the way, all of whom are brought together by the recent death of a mysterious and troubled woman who lived and died secluded in a house so surrounded by marshland that the path to it is only visible at low tide.

The “actors” guide us through the story of the unsuspecting and diligent Kipps on his journey to the enigma of a woman’s now empty house. In due course, we discover that whenever the ghost of the woman in black is seen, a child dies. As they prepare their story for presentation, they discuss story-telling techniques of the late Victorian age, including the recent innovation of recorded sound and modern theatrical ambiance. All the while they remain under the constant and watchful eye of the ever present Woman (Debbie Price) dressed all in black, whose existence is a source of both fear and excitement to the men as they prepare their production. Their play, as well as ours, culminates in a startling dream like a final scene where reality is intermingled with the supernatural and eventually we see that the storytellers have become a part of the narrative as they told it.

So successful was the original stage production that it was made in to a film of the same name, starring a now grown Daniel Radcliffe of Harry Potter fame as the youthful Kipps. The movie focused on the ghost story, but it is the unusual structure and individual boldness of concept that made the stage play such a hit. Those essentials are alive in this production and are further supported by strong acting and many fine production elements.

Fishman takes on the mammoth task of building a multitude of diverse characters, all the while playing a man learning to be an actor. He skillfully delineates dialects and his face tells a different story for each character he plays. Cline plays well the energetic and younger version of Kipps, and Price adds mystery and presence in the silent title role. Director Tom Eubanks braves the difficult script well and succeeds particularly well in building a strong relationship between the two male leads. Eubanks offers up a skillfully staged production that makes use of every inch of the intimate theatre. The costumes suggest well the time and the set by Eubanks is a prime example of ingenuity and inventiveness, though it is at times under used. The show occasionally lacks the jump that one desires in a ghost story, but strong characters, able performers, and a clear grasp of the theatrical value of the piece are well at work here. This show is as difficult as it is stirring and deserves to be performed more often by venues such as this.

The Woman in Black runs through Sept. 16th at the Elite Theatre in Oxnard. http://www.elitetheatre.org/

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