The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Old horse, new saddle

Trinity Rep finds importance in Earnest
By BILL RODRIGUEZ  |  April 7, 2009

090410_Earnest_m
PURELY VERBAL OPERA Milles with Rebecca Gibel, Karl Gregory, and Janice Duclos. 

But what about this matter of throwing a saddle on an old warhorse again? Well, the rider this time around thinks that the play is still as frisky as a colt. She hasn't directed this before, but she has seen it five or six times.

"There is a lot of surprise in this play," says Beth F. Milles (pronounced Mill-is), the director. This is her first venture on the Trinity Rep stage. It's an especially exciting opportunity for her, because she came to town last August to head the MFA directing program of the Brown/Trinity Rep Consortium.

Written in the Victorian England of 1895, the storyline revolves around the double lives of two aristocrat friends who, for social convenience, pretend to have an ill friend and a wastrel brother, respectively, in the city and the country, to allow each to leave whichever location they are in at a moment's notice. If that sounds complicated, think of the double life of Oscar Wilde himself, whose homosexuality was unmasked almost immediately after this play, his last, opened. Eventually he went to jail, and his dual life fell apart.

Milles comes across as curious and intense when talking about Earnest.

"In most plays," she says, "someone comes in, reveals information and changes everyone's life, and then the play pretty much ends. In this play, it keeps happening. Why he's breaking the form is that he keeps bringing people in with revelatory information that changes the whole world.

"In the first act, Jack is saying, 'My name isn't Ernest, it's Jack.' What? Everything I knew about you is gone. The next one is: 'Your brother's here.' 'I don't have a brother.' And the last one is: 'I am Ernest.'

"Stylistically, he was breaking the form," she says. "It's farce and it's comedy, and certainly he was building off of the success of Gilbert & Sullivan or the operetta."

But, Milles adds, while audiences could readily accept extreme comedy with the cushion of music, Wilde was extreme with language alone, sort of playing without a net.

"What I tell everyone is a quote that I've been walking around with in my head since the first day of rehearsal," Milles says, "which is the Auden quote about this play: 'It's the only purely verbal opera in the English language.'

"It is a verbal opera. I mean, just that the language is surprising, and the characters are going in one direction, then they land and someone picks it up and takes it somewhere else."

Milles's solid background in improvisational and physical theater is going to come in handy.

"Always anything anyone says should be married to a physical impulse, whether it's to walk away from someone or walk to someone," she says. "Sometimes in theater you can watch a play and not see those impulses interacting at the same moment. And so I'm always looking to bring those impulses into the same moment, where the verbal and the physical are integral."

Milles came here from Ithaca, leaving a tenured position at Cornell University because, with two young children, she was tired of traveling hither and yon to direct plays. Teaching keeps her honest and fresh, she says. To hear her talk about what she's been trying to get across to her "really hard-working" MFA students is to hear about her own approach to directing Earnest.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Communication breakdown, Trivial pursuit, Ballad of a Dead Man, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Janice Duclos, Oscar Wilde, Oscar Wilde,  More more >
| More


[ 05/20 ]   "The Ashes Series," photographs by Wafaa Bilal  @ David Winton Bell Gallery
[ 05/20 ]   "Rhode Island School of Design Graduate Thesis Exhibition 2013"  @ Rhode Island Convention Center
[ 05/20 ]   "The Festive City,"  @ RISD Museum
ARTICLES BY BILL RODRIGUEZ
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REMIXING SHAKESPEARE  |  May 13, 2013
    From music to costumes to inserted interludes of dance and mad poetry, this staging is vivacious.
  •   A CLOSE ENCOUNTER  |  May 13, 2013
    The set-up couldn't be more straightforward: two strangers are having a conversation in New York's Central Park. Correspondingly, the set couldn't be more simple: a park bench in front of tall color photographs of its bucolic backdrop.
  •   REVIEW: TRATTORIA LONGO  |  May 13, 2013
    Preparing most Italian dishes doesn't require the complexity of organic chemistry. Fresh ingredients, a good recipe, well-timed cooking, and ecco! Benissimo!
  •   SOUR AND DOUR SOULS  |  May 07, 2013
    Some people are brittle and dry as tinder, but they don't have the sense to not play with matches. The two women at the dangerous center of Martin McDonagh's The Beauty Queen of Leenane could blaze up at any moment, and we know that one or both will by the end. Each is filled with so much pent-up hatred that spontaneous combustion seems a distinct possibility.
  •   FOOLS IN LOVE  |  May 07, 2013
    Taking place on the hot Louisiana Gulf Coast, Tennessee Williams's The Rose Tattoo is steamy in more than one way, as human passions boil off repressed emotions.

 See all articles by: BILL RODRIGUEZ



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2013 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group