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War games

The Huntington’s  Third ; the ART’s Copenhagen ; ASP’s Henry V
By CAROLYN CLAY  |  January 16, 2008

080118_third_main
THIRD: Robin Pearson Rose and Maureen Anderman do well by Wendy Wasserstein’s flawed final work.

Wendy Wasserstein might have chosen a lesser light in whose shadow to cast a play than King Lear. But the late author’s final work for the stage, Third (presented by the Huntington Theatre Company at the Boston University Theatre through February 3), refers to Shakespeare’s titanic tragedy, from its droll opening lecture to its academic dust-up over plagiarism to a scene near the end in which an addled old man battles the elements on a sidewalk “heath” before a New England bookstore. Third, of course, is not a titanic tragedy but a warm and pithy if too-pat comedy from the witty, chord-striking feminist who penned the 1989 Pulitzer winner The Heidi Chronicles. Wasserstein died of lymphoma in 2006, just months after the debut of this her dramaturgical swan song, into which she tried to pack a whole lot of what she was thinking and feeling, both on behalf of her own waning self and the generation of “uncommon women” she had come to represent. Is it any wonder, then, that the work — seen here in a crisp, humane, if somewhat magisterial staging by Richard Seer — seems at once thin and overstuffed?

Born in 1950, Wasserstein created a series of smart, funny, romantically challenged boomer heroines, from the Mount Holyoke posse of Uncommon Women and Others to art historian Heidi Holland, who in the mid ’80s wonders where all the feminists have gone. Third brings pioneering liberal English professor Laurie Jameson, who spends the 2002-’03 academic year hot under the collar because of menopausal flushes and ire at the Bush administration. When confronted by happy-go-lucky (and possibly Republican) Midwesterner and college wrestler Woodson Bull III, the “Third” of the title (though it also refers to the final third of one’s life), she at once demonizes the aspiring sports agent as a “walking red state.” And when he turns in a masterfully written psychosexual interpretation of King Lear, she brings him up on plagiarism charges — less because he fails to hold with her radical interpretation, which declares Goneril and Regan “right,” Cordelia a wimp, and the mad monarch himself a foolish old narcissist, than because, as her perceived political opposite, he can no more have a brain than L. Frank Baum’s Scarecrow.

That’s the main plot, but others intrude. Laurie’s colleague and best friend, the twinklingly shrewd Nancy Gordon, is going through cancer torture. Her childlike if cantankerous father has fallen victim to Lear-like Alzheimer’s. And her daughter, a freshman at Swarthmore who happens onto Woodson Bull III and his side of the story, condemns her mother as cloistered, rigid, and “limited.” Moreover, professorial superstar Laurie has left her political-scientist husband so far behind that he’s become Mr. Cellophane with a PhD. Both the cancer and the Alzheimer’s are visitors from Wasserstein’s own life — rooted in her own, her sister’s, and her father’s experience — and, in hindsight, one understands why she was in such a rush to write about them. But the way in which everything jigsaws together is, for all of Wasserstein’s compassion and bristling intellectual jocularity, both sentimental and schematic. Yet the comedy tugs at your heartstrings even as you point a finger at its flaws.

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ARTICLES BY CAROLYN CLAY
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 See all articles by: CAROLYN CLAY

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