Circling the bowl
As You Like It: The Big Flush
Written by Amelia
Bassano Lanier, a.k.a William Shakespeare
Directed by Stephen
Wisker
Presented by John
Hudson & The Dark Lady Players (www.darkladyplayers.com)
Midtown
International Theatre Festival (www.midtownfestival.org)
Equity showcase (through
Review by David
Mackler
According to that not-always-completely-accurate source of
internet truth, Wikipedia.com (open-edited by the public at large), the
16th/17th century poet Amelia Bassano Lanier has been accepted by the UK-based
Shakespearean Authorship Trust (headed by 2008 Tony Award winner Mark Rylance)
as a top contender for the real writer behind the curtain that William
Shakespeare has been standing in front of for 400 years. This decision was
based on a 2007 production by The Dark Lady Players of ‘the world's first
allegorical production of any Shakespearean play’ (their claim), A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Said Dark Lady Players have now presented at the Midtown
International Theatre Festival their take on As You Like It, and subtitled it The Big Flush because, per their press release, on an “allegorical
level….(As You Like It) contains a
Jewish toilet joke written by England’s only Jewish poet”, said Amelia Bassano
Lanier.
Built on this rickety foundation, The Big Flush version of As
You Like It has a running commentary – not written by Lanier, or
Shakespeare, or even Francis Bacon – that is not unlike the alternate audio
track on a DVD that gives way too much information, provided by people who are
as over-prepared as a college debating team, and who believe that everyone will
be converted to their way of thinking.
Consequently, The Big
Flush plays very much like a graduate student paper played for laughs. It
seems that everything in As You Like It
refers back, in one way or another, to shit. And biblical allegory. That would
be quite enough, but director Stephen Wisker has paced it all at breakneck
speed, so only the occasional gag lands. It’s funny, in the scheme of things,
to have the woman doing some narrating (and later playing Touchstone), Kirsta Peterson, give birth to a large
poster of Shakespeare that another character then speaks through; it’s usually
hard enough for a cast to make early 17th-century jokes funny (sex
jokes are always sure-fire, it’s the topical humor that’s rough); but a
pseudo-scholarly treatise on shit, Jews, feminism, Jesus, etc. that’s presented
as fait accompli is like a climber
scaling the White Cliffs of Dover with Scotch tape on his shoes for traction.
Now all of what’s presented may be true. Lanier may have
written Shakespeare, every toilet reference may be accurate, and every clue the
Dark Lady Players decode may be God’s truth. But the best bits of this
presentation were the glimpses of As You
Like It that peeked through. Kate
Murray was a fine Rosalind when given the chance, and Ashley Diane Currie well matched her as
There may be a convincing argument to be made about Lanier,
toilets, the bible, etc. – there may even be a comedy in it. And why not? But it might work better aimed at more than
grad students.
Also with Jen Browne,
Kate Murray, Donna Lazar, Emily Moment, Alexandra Cohen-Spiegler, Daniela
Dakich, and Lindsay Tanner.
Writing: 1
Directing: 1
Acting: 1
Sets: 1
Costumes: 1
Lighting/Sound: 1
Copyright 2008 by David Mackler
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