Tartuffe by Moliere.
Adapted by Phillip Kavanagh. Directed by Chris Drummond, State Theatre Company of South Australia and Brink Productions. Dunstan Playhouse. Adelaide Festival Centre. November 4 – 20 2016.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Nathan O'Keefe is Tartuffe. Photo by Kate Pardey |
Comedy, farce or tragicomedy?
Director Chris Drummond’s slick, snappy and wickedly witty production of
Moliere’s Tartuffe for Brink
Productions and the State Theatre Company of South Australia is a triumphant
display of all three. Too often, Moliere’s biting satires are played for laughs,
presenting a foolish family, subjected to the sycophantic whims of the
sanctimonious hypocrite, Tartuffe. The
danger is that it too swiftly slides into silliness, too easily dismissed as
the foolish carryings-on of ridiculous characters . It is only when this bitter
tale of Orgon’s religious obsession and devotion to the manipulative Tartuffe
against the suspicions and advice of the family members becomes a force for
destruction that the true power of Moliere’s cautionary tragicomedy is
revealed.
No student of Moliere nor any
devotee of his razor sharp analysis of the human condition should miss
Drummond’s production, not because it is a traditional representation of the
seventeenth century French comedy but
because it sparkles with contemporary relevance. As Dorine (Jacqui Phillips)
says at the start of the production “It’s not even in rhyme”. Phillip
Kavanagh’s adaptation adheres to the spirit of Moliere’s text in translation,
but he imbues Moliere’s characters with a contemporary immediacy and truth that
does not belittle Moliere’s theme but hurls it forcefully and wittily into the
twenty-first century. Kavanagh’s translation
and adaptation, whether crass, vulgar, sinister or snide, wise, witty or wildly
irrevent unveils comedy in behavior, farce in reaction and tragicomedy in
consequence. An audience soon discovers the conflict caused by Orgon’s
obsession with Tartuffe’s feigned piety, angrily denounced by Orgon’s son Damis
(Guy O’Grady), his wife Elmire (Astrid Pill),his brother Cleante (Rory Walker),
his daughter Mariane (Rachel Burke) and his housemaid Dorine. It is the apparent
tragic consequence of Orgon’s fatal flaw that lends Moliere’s comedy a bitter
gravity. In the face of ultimate loss of property, identity, family, status and
human dignity a good and noble man is brought to the brink of ruin by his own
foolishness and autocratic resistance to the voices of reason. Only the
intervention of a wise and just monarch avoids the tragic consequence of
misplaced trust and foolish devotion.
Tartuffe by Moliere.Photo by Kate Pardey |
Moliere’s comedic devices are
given a breath of fresh air in Drummond’s imaginative interpretation. Actor,
Nathan O’Keefe warms up the audience from the outset, introducing the play with
vociferous complaint that his character, Tartuffe, should have to wait so long
before an entrance, or that the deplorable state of arts funding has compelled
the company to dragoon composer Alan John to take on the role of Orgon’s
equally obsessed and religiously fanatical mother, Pernelle. Before four grandiose chandeliers and on the
white marble floor of Michael Hankins’ simple, yet elegant stage setting,
O’Keefe sets the scene.
What makes this production so
refreshing is its agility. While observing the influential conventions of
Commedia, Drummond’s Tartuffe is
liberating, spontaneous and extremely funny.
The recognizable stock characters
of the Commedia tradition are realized in Orgon’s Pantalone, Dorine’s Brighella,
Antoine Jelk’s Valere and Burke’s Mariane
as the Lovers. O’Grady’s gawkish Damis strikes just the right note of comical
bewilderment. Moliere affords his characters a complexity and sophistication
beyond the limitations of improvisational Commedia. The lazzi, so superbly
realized in Drummond’s stage business, are moments of magic during the
seduction scene as Elmire desperately attempts to reveal to Orgon Tartuffe’s
sinister duplicity. O’Keefe, dressed in the black garb of a Rasputin and the
visage of a Christ slithers with lustful perfection. This is a Tartuffe that oozes sleaze and
sanctimonious hypocrisy. O’Keefe’s performance
is exceptional. Paul Blackwell is
excellent in the role of Orgon, endowing the character with absolute
authenticity, cloaked in credibility and able to arouse sympathy when he finally
admits to his blind folly.
Nathan O' Keefe as Tartuffe. Photo by Kate Pardey |
As the title character of Moliere’s
irreverent attack on hypocrisy and religious obsession, Nathan O’Keefe is
superb. With sycophantic guile he weasels his way into Orgon’s gullibility,
while slithering with lustful design upon the
defenseless Elnire. Drummond makes the most of O’Keefe’s physical
agility, as he does with other characters throughout the production. The stage
is alive with momentum, revolving with manic mayhem about the resolute Orgon,
played with perfectly timed conviction by Paul Blackwell..
Only Rory Walker’s Cleante fails
to engage. His swallowed diction sacrifices the skillful delivery of his
asinine advice in a performance more wooden than stoic, though pompous enough
in its befuddlement. It is unfortunate that he only occasionally succeeds in
delivering a dry punchline. Phillips’s rasping Strine, though true to class,
also suffers from some incomprehensible delivery of dialogue and a tendency to
caricature. Dorine’s subtle art of
influence is too simply overwhelmed by excess.
Rachel Burke as Mariane . Photo by Kate Pardey |
Such criticism aside, there is a great
deal to applaud in this fresh interpretation 0f Moliere’s comedy. Brink have
grasped the tenor of our time and let the production make pertinent comment. Politicians
are held up to ridicule in a final analysis of life’s absurdity. There are
perfomances to admire, actions to applaud and characters to judge as Drummond’s
direction and Kavanagh’s lively, contemporary adaptation make this a Tartuffe to enjoy and adulate.