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Mayan Bard
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Arclight Rep moves 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' to Mexico for Shakespeare on
the Square Festival
EXCHANGING the traditional ivy crowns for feather headdresses and playful
Elizabethan forest nymphs for mischievous Mayan jungle spirits, Arclight
Repertory's Theatre's Shakespeare on the Square Festival production of A
Midsummer Night's Dream interprets one of Shakespeare's most popular
comedies through the lens of vibrant Central American culture. Though
sincere in its efforts to translate the play's English pleasantry into
Mexican ethos, the Mayan folk themes feel more tacked on than not. The
Mexican connection is primarily achieved though differences in costume
choice, and with pipe music and folkloric dancing interspersed awkwardly
throughout.
Of the play's three worlds (supernatural, aristocratic and peasantry), the
strongest and most comically pleasing by far was that of the merry band of
amateur actors. Arclight presents them as a Stetson-wearing, cerveza-slewing
bunch who congregate out in front of the local farmacia to practice their
parts in a ridiculous version of Pyramus and Thisbe. With his booming voice
and commanding presence, Mark Gelineau's over-the-top portrayal of Bottom
was thoroughly entertaining. Gelineau's comic timing as the weaver turned
actor turned ass was amusing throughout, whether he was taking his role as
the tragic Pyramus way too seriously or scratching his newly sprouted donkey
ears while being doted on by the fickle Tania, queen of the Ushmals (a very
physical Sarah Shoshana David, flitting around stage, dancing and swinging
her hips).
Puck, the central role of any production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, is
played more darkly then usual by Brittney Mignano. Her Puck hisses and spits
at her dispatcher, the roughish King Oberon (GreyWolf, also double cast as
Theseus), as he sends her to do his bidding, more of a spirit of chaos and
vengeance than cheekiness. The diverse set who make up the group of
mismatched lovers were enjoyable in their various inherently silly parts.
Fiona Lawson was particularly commanding as the exasperated Helena,
enthralled with the fussy Demetrius (Ravi Soundararajan), while Amy Wares
presented a spoiled, almost bratty Hermia, squealing and in love with the
poetically inclined Lysander (Marc Tabor).
Shakespeare's story takes place in ancient Athens, but the time frame of
this production seams to vary greatly in interpretation. Though the scene is
supposedly set in present-day Piste, Mexico, and the Mayan ruins of Chichen
Itza, some characters dress and act like Mayan warriors (Amazon queens
inhabiting the modern Central American countryside?), some appear in
traditional attire via the Mexican revolution, while others are clad in
modern miniskirts and suits. The result is a confusing aesthetic mishmash of
Mexican culture, which further muddles the play's already complicated
perception of place and time. Though acted with earnestness, the cultural
and artistic identity of Mexico never quite congeals with Shakespeare's
vision of summer frivolity in this production.
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