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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT3251>
<title>
Dec. 11, 1989: Dreamscapes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THEATER, Page 109
Dreamscapes
</hdr><body>
<qt> <l>MYSTERY OF THE ROSE BOUQUET</l>
<l>by Manuel Puig</l>
</qt>
<p> In Kiss of the Spider Woman, the novel of two mismatched
prison inmates that became an Oscar-winning film, Manuel Puig
portrayed how enforced intimacy can impel people to enter each
other's psyches. Mystery of the Rose Bouquet, now at Los
Angeles' Mark Taper Forum, explores the same phenomenon. This
time the setting is a hospital in Argentina, and the characters
who drift into each other's dreamscapes are women -- an old
contrary patient, rich and autocratic (Anne Bancroft), and a
middle-aged nurse whose outward cheer belies a lifetime of
thwarted opportunity and scant satisfaction (Jane Alexander).
</p>
<p> By the end, they achieve an emotional bond -- a standard
for hospital melodrama -- but in reveries rather than everyday
contact. The patient becomes a stand-in for the nurse's dead
mother; the nurse is transformed into the patient's long-lost
sister, then an estranged daughter. The little dramas of
hospital routine thus become freighted with the burdens of
decades. Trivial exchanges achieve the dimensions of catharsis.
Puig deftly interweaves other themes, including the oppression
of all women under Latin machismo and the extent to which South
Americans may still defensively see theirs as a colonial
culture.
</p>
<p> Bancroft, playing a South American aristocrat, sounds more
like South Brooklyn and about as aristocratic as a hash-house
waitress. Alexander ably sketches differences among the
dowager's airhead sister, mean daughter and timid nurse, but,
as the last, lapses into a singsong that has become her
trademark shorthand for innocence. Adding to the problem, Robert
Allan Ackerman's archly formal staging emphasizes ritual over
a sense of place. Still, the two women establish an ever
shifting power dynamic. In the last fantasy, when they embrace
fondly in an imagined courtyard, their warmth and urgency enable
the audience to share in an emotional payoff.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>