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DC Theatre Scene
OPUS
By Michael Hollinger
Produced by Washington Stage Guild
Reviewed by Rosalind Lacy
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| Kryztov Lindquist, Carl Randolph,
R. Scott, with Kathleen Coons, Carl Randolph and Ritchie Porter (Photo:
C. Stanley Photography) |
Early on in Michael Hollinger’s
Opus, string quartet music is compared to love making and "a discourse
among four reasonable people." Beautifully acted and staged at the Washington
Stage Guild, director Steven Carpenter establishes the right tone for
the interlock of a witty duel from brilliant talk that resonates like
shared notes and overlapping phrases of music.
Off-stage, you would expect the
select four "to complete sentences for each other," if they must perform
together "like four instruments with one bow." Not so. Ultimately, the
playwright’s seamless dialogue builds to a moment of delicious discord
that transcends into titillating theater. On opening night, the audience
seemed to take a breath with each rest in the well-timed interplay until
the last tense moment.
Inside the intimate world of this
fictional Lazara String Quartet, three of the virtuoso players have ganged
up and fired the violist for being unreliable. But the viola is essential
as the earthy-voiced fiddle between the cello and violins; in that it
feeds in rich, dark chocolate tones. Without it, something is definitely
missing—something like soul? So, the three, surviving males replace their
violist with a gifted, generation-younger, fledgling, Grace, well-played
with precision-timing and grace by Kathleen Coons. Reorganized, they choose
Beethoven’s difficult Opus 131, revered for its "intellectual complexity,"
to be performed at their upcoming, career-capping White House gig. The
high-stress rehearsals for this televised-to-millions, command performance
drive the story. A flashback reveals to the newcomer the quartet’s turning
point in a London recording studio when the group’s serious internal strife
surfaces and the relationship between two lovers suffered long-term damage.
The internal strife is as complex as the music they play.
Actor Kryztov Lindquist, as Elliot,
the perfectionist first violinist, makes his character subtly controlling
. Lindquist’s Elliot is not overtly evil, just eccentric and competitive
to the point of being primly indignant over his territorial imperatives.
But Lindquist wisely plays him even-handedly with enough balance to deceive
us with the notion that he’s the leader of the pack. The actor reveals
a character who carries a deep passion for the instruments that were hand-crafted
in 1710 from one tree by fiddle maker Lazara, the group’s namesake. Yet
doesn’t feel the music, critical for the story’s climax.
R. Scott Williams plays the rebel
violist Dorian with an open-hearted bravura and full vibrato. The actor
is solidly convincing as the temperamental visionary, the unpredictable
neurotic with mind and soul. Dorian is the passionate musician who puts
the music first as a conduit for what the composer intends. For him, perfection
is never realized, "never perfect, just closer." Dorian is not only a
well-spring for friction, but also for healing.
The other two characters surprise
us with contradictions as well. Actor Carl Randolph plays Alan, the amiable
second violinist, whose closing soliloquy brings the motifs into focus
at the end. Their music is so much more than the notes they play that
you feel the characters are talking about something allegorical: "You
play your part the best you can until you run out of notes," says Alan.
A compelling undercurrent resides
in the fact that one of the musicians is fighting cancer. Ritchie Porter
plays Carl, the sensitive family man, who’s as devoted to playing the
cello, the low-voiced bass line instrument, as he is to holding the group
together. Carl is the quiet one who goes along with the others and pretty
much keeps his feelings and opinions to himself until the pressure blows
his cool. But another revelation introduces yet another ominous note that
threatens the quartet’s stability along with the petty, out-in-the-open
quarrels. When the passion for performance fails to hold the Lazara String
Quartet together, will the center fall apart?
The actors are not musicians yet
they hold their musical instruments and efficiently mime bowing and playing
without finger movement. Recorded quartet music played by The Vertigo
String Quartet, is synchronized so flawlessly, with never a missed cue
by Sound Operator Nancy Viemeister, that the illusion is well established
that professional musicians are performing before us.
Set designer Marcus Darnley introduces
us to the art reflects life theme with a musical staff design that integrates
with the action. Five white pillars, plastered with collages of sheet
music, stand like a musical staff against a black curtain backdrop. Four
five-lined bars, like sheet music, are painted on the floor. The design
is eye-stopping and effective enough to stir conversation among audience
members before the play begins. Resident lighting designer Marianne Meadows
does a nice job with lighting on an un-curtained, three-quarter stage.
It’s Hollinger’s brilliant dialogue
that makes Opus resonate beyond the music world. On opening night as the
play ended, a borrowed quote from Shakespeare’s Hamlet felt so right,
a thrill went through the audience in the last moment.
(Running time: 90-minutes, no intermission)The
area premiere of Opus, directed by Steven Carpenter, continues through
May 20th, at The Washington Stage Guild, 1901 14th St., NW (14th and T,
NW), located two blocks from the U Street/Cardozo Metro Station (13th
St. exit) on the Green Line. Performances and Prices: Thurs. at 7:30 p.m.,
$35; Fri. and Sat. at 8 p.m., $40; Sat. and Sun. Matinees at 2:30 p.m.
$35. Discounts available for seniors, students, AEA, and Actors’ Center
members. For information and reservations, call 240-582-0050 or go to
www.stageguild.org

1901 14th St. NW.
Call now for tickets!
(240) 582-0050
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