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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-24
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<text id=94TT0471>
<title>
Apr. 25, 1994: Theater:Now This Is A Comeback
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 85
Theater
Now This Is A Comeback
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Who's the hottest playwright all over America today? Pierre
de Carlet Chamblain de Marivaux, of course, who died in 1763.
</p>
<p>By William A. Henry III
</p>
<p> Who are America's hottest playwrights? Some are fast-rising
newcomers and some are old hands. But nobody is faster rising
or more of an old hand than Pierre de Carlet Chamblain de Marivaux,
who in the past few years has vaulted from a footnote or curiosity
to a leading dramatist at the nation's nonprofit houses--and
who has been dead since 1763. This season alone has seen at
least eight major productions involving four plays, from False
Admissions at Connecticut's Hartford Stage to The Triumph of
Love at California's Berkeley Repertory. Studio Arena Theatre
in Buffalo, New York, is now playing The Game of Love and Chance;
a different translation of Triumph is running off-Broadway;
and Princeton's McCarter troupe is rehearsing The Double Inconstancy,
retranslated as Changes of Heart.
</p>
<p> Marivaux's plays were long derided as being wordy, high-flown
and much alike--they are all about the lengths to which people
will go, the rules they will break and the indignities they
will suffer in pursuit of romance. As rediscovery began a few
years ago, European and avant-garde American stagings often
emphasized the dark elements of his work. At the other extreme,
some scholars saw only his fascination with Italian commedia
dell'arte buffoonery. The premier Marivaux exponent Stephen
Wadsworth, who directed his translation of Triumph at Berkeley
and is staging his text of Changes of Heart at McCarter, thinks
any successful production mingles both flavors: "Marivaux's
plays all combine joy and ebullience with a savagely acute perception
of how people operate. He wants to leave you on the horns of
a dilemma. You cannot simply like his characters for what they
are or simply dislike them for what they do."
</p>
<p> This moral complexity is one reason for Marivaux's popularity
in a cynical time. Another is his obsession with sex and its
consequences. Says artistic director Mark Lamos of Hartford:
"We're in an age where we can only talk about sex, not have
it. These plays are a roundelay of sexual enticement." A third
factor, Lamos adds, is that the nonprofit theater has explored
the best-known classics, "so there is a natural movement toward
the less familiar."
</p>
<p> In Buffalo there is merriment but no melancholy. The translation
provides for commedia improvisations and further toys with the
original by casting the actors both as the Marivaux characters
and as a 1930s British touring troupe performing the play. The
evening is fun. But it reveals little of why Lamos and others
think Marivaux may be genuinely great.
</p>
<p> The off-Broadway Triumph, however, makes the case. Its heroine,
a princess disguised as a man, seeks the hand of a prince from
a deposed rival family. To get her way, she bullies servants
and promises to marry the prince's unworldly guardians--an
austere philosopher who spots her true gender and his matronly
sister, who doesn't. The production is vividly pretty. What
makes it work, though, is its edge, sharper than Shakespeare's
in similar plots--especially when the bamboozled guardians
realize they have been cast aside and stare with shame and despair
into a slowly fading light.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>