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Not To Be Missed:

The Spitfire Grill

 SPAMALOT

The Violet Hour

Spelling Bee

Love Song

Angels In America

Part I & II

The Secret Garden

Clash by Night

Urinetown

Dealer’s Choice

Romance

Loose Knit

A Flea in Her Ear

The Sweetest Swing in Baseball

 A Life in the Theatre

Two For the Show

Hizzoner

Menopause The Musical

The Chalk Garden

By Enid Bagnold

Directed by William Brown

A Northlight Theatre production

North Shore Center for the Performing Arts

9501 Skokie Boulevard

Skokie, IL 60077

Call 847-673-6300, tickets $34-$54

Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays at 7:30pm

Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm

Saturdays at 3pm (except 3/25)

Sundays at 2:30 pm (except 4/16)

Wednesdays at 1pm 4/5, 4/12, 4/19 only

Sundays at 7pm 3/26, 4/2, and 4/16 only

Running time 2 hours with 1 intermission

Through April 23, 2006

“A life without a room of one’s own is unbearable.”

“I never allow myself to think, I have another method.”

“Judges don’t age. Time decorates them.”

“Truth doesn’t work in a court of law.”

“What a person listens to at trial is not his life but the shape and shadow of it, with the accident of truth taken out of it.”

Bagnold’s Exploration of Family and Justice Elegantly and Unevenly Staged by Northlight

Theatrical genres challenge each generation. Enid Bagnold’s splendidly crafted well made play (and this term is used with no pejorative intent) is delightful to the ear. Gems of lines emerge on balance from almost every character at regular intervals, and each scene has its own, delightful, curtain line.  This is a thinking man and woman’s drawing room comedy with explorations of mother daughter relations, class distinctions, and marvelous reflections on the law.  Described as a “comedy of manners” in the playbill or even “high comedy” by The Burns Mantle Yearbook of 1955-1956, to a contemporary audience the themes in THE CHALK GARDEN play more as drama with comedic elements. And this struggle for genre is reflected in this production’s struggle for tone.

The Chalk Garden

The story takes place in the drawing room cum dining room of a manor house in Sussex, England “at the present day” when the play opened on Broadway in 1955 [followed by a run in London’s West End in 1956], and set in 1959 according to the current production’s playbill. Laurel (Elizabeth Ledo) is 16, frustrated, living with her grandmother, and in need of yet another “companion” (the 16 year old’s version of a governess, we are left to assume). Madrigal (the luminous Tracy Michelle Arnold) is the last applicant remaining in the current round of potential replacements.  Despite Madrigal’s own reservations with the child’s attitude and belligerence, she is taken with the challenge of cultivating the chalky soil of the manor’s gardens, mis-treated by the manor’s mistress and her aging servant’s mis-guided advice, and so takes on both jobs.

Through four scenes and two acts of the play we get to know the young Laurel, her grandmother Mrs. St. Maugham (Deanna Dunagan), Laurel’s mother and St. Maugham’s daughter Olivia (Karen Woditsch), the butler Maitland (Steve Hinger), and a nurse (Isabel Liss) who regularly appears with news of the ailing offstage aging household retainer. We also meet the visiting luncheon guest and Maugham’s old friend Judge (Joel Hatch), who provides the fodder for the household’s final revelations.   Each of these strong performers commands his or her portion of the stage and helps to craft the world of the play.

chalkcollage3

The world is also beautifully created by the set designed by Matthew York, the lovely lighting by Charles Cooper, mood music and sound designed by Josh Schmidt (including some fabulous storm effects), and costumes by Rachel Anne Healy.

We should care about Laurel and her loneliness, and care about whether she will return to live with her suddenly present mother, whose absence we learn is complicated by her relationship with her mother of course.  We should care about the resolution (or lack thereof) of the relationship between Maugham and her daughter Olivia. And we should focus on the faces of Madrigal and Maugham as they plan the future of their lives and of the chalk garden.  The women’s stories should rule this play, and in this production, they are undercut in several ways.

chalkcollage4

This beautifully crafted physical world is not in balance when it ought to be.  The tendency to go over the top with delivery of some lines and entire characterizations, while entertaining and charming in themselves, disrupts what plays otherwise as an exploration of family dynamics augmented (or resolution facilitated) courtesy of the arrival of a woman with a past. The undercutting nuances of the final revelations of the mysteries of Madrigal’s past do not resonate as movingly as they might when other points of the evening have been played at such a high comedic pitch.  When the butler Maitland gushes over the possibilities of a new with Madrigal just before the final resolving moments between Madrigal and Maugham, the play is not well served. Toning down Maitland’s characterization alone would cost the performance some of its raucous laughs earlier in the play, but could contribute to a tighter production.  The overall tone for the entire evening might better serve the play if the response to the play’s humor were chuckles rather than guffaws.

Recommended

Martha Wade Steketee

msteketee@post.harvard.edu for comments

Date Reviewed March 29, 2006

Jeff Recommended

 

 

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