Friday, November 11, 2016

Thank you Donna Palumbo Hager!

Thank you Donna Palumbo Hager, for stepping in to help our costume department! We you!

Thursday, November 10, 2016

about the play



When Gore Vidal adapted Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s “Romulus the Great” in
1962, he had his work cut out for him. American novelist and occasional
playwright, Vidal knew that adaptation went against everything we viewers
hold sacred in the art of theatre. Namely, an unshaking fidelity to the
writer’s own authentic experiences.

Romulus embodies Vidal’s obsession with classical culture, but that’s where
Vidal’s relatability to the Swiss playwright’s work seems to end. He once
commented that Roman life couldn’t be further away from the modern
American experience if it tried. If that is the case, what is he trying to pull
off by dropping our theatre-goers smack-dab in the middle of antiquity?

While the play’s ambiguities deliberately evade a direct response to
that question, the work’s key themes quickly, and brilliantly, unfold to
obvious effect. Respectfully eloquent, yet deliberately biting, Vidal’s play
encompasses what we anticipate most in a modern lyricist: the adoration
of morality contrasted with the gradations and subjectivity of our own
personal truths. He is able to make a far-off world relevant by infusing
it with lofty, objective truths and the uncertainties inherent in each and
everyone one of us.

But Vidal was able to succeed where even some of the most talented
playwrights struggled, not only because he harped on life’s most intangible
philosophical questions, but because he put the conversation precisely in a
tone we understand, which is to say, political.

Vidal takes Dürrenmatt’s backdrop of the fall of the Roman empire and
injects it with scathing irony, a task Vidal was readily equipped to handle.
Vidal’s Romulus little resembles the real Romulus Augustus, Rome’s last
Caesar who barely reached adolescence when he inadvertently presided over
the fall of the Roman emperor, much to everyone’s dismay. That’s about the
end of this play’s historical references. Our Romulus doesn’t just accept the
fall of civilization as he knows it, he quite condones it.

Prancing around the palace as Rome literally crumbs, Romulus has the
undesirable task of warding off political players he rejects and despises.
From the phony capitalistic pants manufacturer, whose business ventures
seem to garner him reluctant public support despite his cluelessness to the
bureaucrats who operate under meaningless terms and convoluted policy
plans to hide the fact that they are more cogs in the machine, we can’t help but
see the detriments of our own political landscape.

But when Romulus finally meets his antithesis, the ominous German invader
Ottaker, we are left with more than political commentary. The scene is not
marked by victorious battles of brute force. Instead, we find a showdown
between ideologies that is both provocative and amusing. Ottaker tugs and
pulls at Romulus’ logic until the great Caesar’s philosophical underpinnings,
which he’s spent a lifetime concocting, barely have a leg to stand on, making
Romulus’ neat bifurcations of the world – wrong vs right, past vs future,
truth vs falsehood – seem a little too naïve. But in the face of his own
internal inconsistencies, Romulus’ cunning wit finds some push back of his
own and he undercovers just as much fault in Ottaker’s new world order as
that of his old. Whether or not our heroes and antiheroes have triumphed
or been defeated, discerned the cold hard truth or equivocated yet again,
we’re forced to reckon with some inconvenient and subtle similarities
between their world and ours.

Who knows, there may just be a lesson here about the decay of the Roman
empire that can inform our contemporary ideas of American exceptionalism.
Or maybe it’s just a slight jab at the thought of making America great again.

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

From the director



Romulus: We are at the razor’s edge. My friends, today of all days we wear the
mask of Comedy!

When I first read this play, I thought it was interesting, clever, and chock full
of allusions that could be humorously relevant to our current political climate.
A Fall comedy about the Fall of the Roman Empire for a community that I
hoped would not have already been so relentlessly flogged by a campaign season
(which itself would be comic if the stakes were not so high) that no one could
muster a chuckle.

But as it turns out, Romulus, the Emperor, is a pretty dark guy; an absolutist
who deliberately steers the bus (with everyone on it) over a cliff as a moral
example. That’s not a comic hero one necessarily wants to laugh along with.
In fact, over the past 10 weeks as our troupe brought this work to life, I began
to realize that what I had thought was mostly a satiric comedy is, at its core, a
rather somber meditation on our society safely dressed up in the garb of antiquity.

Yet, Gore Vidal, one of the most urbane, scholarly, and acerbic social
commentators of his day, clearly had a soft spot for our country’s dedication to
the peaceful transfer of power. He wrote this play when McCarthyism was still
a raw wound, the Cold War was raging, and the presidential campaign of 1960,
which pitted Richard Nixon against John F. Kennedy, had just concluded by an
historically slim margin.

In an almost sentimental twist, when the nihilistic protagonist, Romulus, finally
meets Ottaker the Goth -- the enemy of civilization who has waged war because
of public opinion to advance an “ism” which he knows is meaningless -- there
is no bloodbath; there is no head on a pike. There is a peaceful, if curious,
transfer of power.

Voltaire observed, “True comedy is the ‘speaking picture’ of the follies and
foibles of a nation.” And Vidal added to that, “True comedy uses everything. It
is sharp; it is topical; it does not worry about its own dignity…it merely mocks
the false dignity of others.”

I hope that our interpretation of this odd, funny, and provocative play
illuminates some dark patches in our own political landscape – or at least helps
us pose the right questions. Lord knows there has been no shortage of follies
and foibles as we make our own transition from one political leader to the next.

Rina Steinhauer