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Executive Artistic Director
David Alford |
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By MARTIN BRADY
The Rep starts the season on a strong note with a classic drama about
an issue that just won't go away
Fall is football seasona time when early success on the gridiron
is to be viewed with cautious optimism. Such guarded hope might be wise
when gauging the prospects for Tennessee Repertory Theatre's new season.
But for now, the Rep has started strong with its first offering under
the new leadership of artistic director David Alford.
Some may recall Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee's Inherit the Wind as
a slightly moth-eaten potboiler, and rightfully so. Though it is certainly
well-crafted, it creaks a little with melodrama. Nonetheless, the Rep's
current production at Polk Theater provides a charming portrait of small-town
1920s Tennessee and a consistently engaging tale of two great men squaring
off in court, debating what is still today a hot-button issue.
Creationism vs. evolutionfascinating controversy that it isis
secondary here to simple humanity and heartfelt nostalgia. Gary Hoff's
perfectly appointed set brings to life the fictional town of Hillsboro
in equal measures of realism and colorful wistfulness. Trish Clark's period
costumes are by turns sumptuous and folksy, and Chris Wilson bathes the
entire production in artful lighting that sweeps broadly across the proscenium,
zeroes in subtly on smaller scenes and periodically captures stage tableaux
in frozen moments with flashes of light, creating the impression of old-time
sepia-toned photographs.
With all the technical bases skillfully covered, director Alford sets
out to relate a story that relies on courtroom dramatics for its fireworks,
but is equally rooted in affecting character study. It's hugely successful
theater: well-paced, humorous, uninhibitedly performed and wholly unafraid
of its regionalism. If those are our narrow-minded Tennessee forebears
onstage, then so be it.
It's a large cast, with many local community theater players in supporting
roles. Non-union vetssome of whom are making their first-ever appearance
on a Rep stageinclude Linda Speir, Warren Gore, Jim Wright, Laura
Skaug, Richard Daniel, Phil Perry-Dixon and Sam Whited, and all of them
handle their roles quite effectively.
The principals are superb. Cecil Jones has the role of a lifetime as bombastic,
Bible-thumping ex-presidential candidate Matthew Harrison Brady, who arrives
to trumpet the townsfolks' cause in defense of the Good Book. Mark Cabus
offers stiff competition as the cagey, pro-Darwin Chicago lawyer Henry
Drummond. Matt Chiorini plays the natty Baltimore journalist E.K. Hornbeck
with a devilish glee and Matthew Carlton hems and haws convincingly as
the provincial judge who ultimately metes out some rather tepid justice.
Pros Henry Haggard, Brian Webb Russell, Carol Ponder and Joe Keenan contribute
their usual excellent work.
Finally, Anitra Brumagen, making her Rep debut as the preacher's daughter,
and Pete Vann, as the schoolteacher who supports the theory of evolution,
deftly provide the love interest.
But the biggest triumph here is Alford's. His work looks very comfortable
in the large-canvas environment of the Polk. Tightly choreographed crowd
scenes, which occasionally usher townies through the audience, are enlivened
with Protestant hymns; intimate scenes are seamlessly interwoven into
the play's larger structure; and Jones and Cabus are steered front and
center at the appropriate times for maximum dramatic impact.
It may be too soon to place bets on the new team at the Rep, but they
sure looked good in their opener.
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