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Mad Horse moves Hedda Gabler to the ’50s
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  April 9, 2008
theater_madhorse1inside
POSITIVELY GREEK: Christine Louise Marshall in the title role.

Hedda Gabler: A Re-Vision by Henrik Ibsen | Directed and adapted by Joan Sand | Produced by Mad Horse Theatre Company | at the Studio Theater of Portland Stage Company | through April 20 | 207.730.2389
Triangulations are many and charged in the Tesmans’ circle, and for newlywed Hedda Tesman, née Gabler (Christine Louise Marshall), it is imperative to be an apex. Too shrewd and blasé to be satisfied in her cop-out marriage to humdrum academic George, Hedda’s amusements — and her survival strategies — are Machiavellian. They are also her downfall. Though written in 1890, Hedda’s is a timeless tragedy. Mad Horse moves it forward in time, tweaking it beautifully along the way, in Hedda Gabler: A Re-Vision, Joan Sand’s ambitious adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s classic.

The triangle Hedda forms with fussy George and their lecherous family friend Judge Brack gains several new angles with the reappearance of two figures from the past: Thea Elvsted, an old schoolmate of Hedda, calls upon the Tesmans with concern for Eilert Lovborg, a writer, academic rival of George, and (unbeknownst to anyone else) former lover of Hedda. As the constellations of these five characters shift and increase in stake, Hedda — obsessed with power, having little herself — positions herself for sharp angles.

Playing on its protagonist’s repression under class, gender, and social mores, Sand (who also directs) sets Hedda in a university-town American Midwest of the 1950s. It’s a natural choice, and in Sand’s adaptation both the big themes and the small details of the culture translate well. And the production also looks great, very echt-’50s, with George in a red sweater-vest and dark-rimmed glasses, and Hedda looking proper but dangerously radiant in a vintage petticoated black dress and scarlet lipstick.

Sand’s other directorial decision, this one much more audacious and risky, concerns casting: In this production, Marshall’s Hedda is the only character played by one actor alone. Everyone else (including small roles like the maid and George’s Aunt Juliana) is portrayed via a steady, ensemble-style rotation of Mad Horse talent, who trade simple costumes over black slacks and white shirts. For example, in the first scene George is played by Craig Bowden, the Judge by Peter Brown, and Thea by Lisa Muller-Jones. But in every subsequent scene, the casting schematic is freshly shaken up, to humorous and eventually rather ominous effect.

That might sound gimmicky, but its result approaches brilliance. Handled masterfully by this excellent cast, Sand’s innovation lends a surreal and Expressionist dimension to Hedda’s tortured consciousness. With each new casting, Hedda’s crew of cohorts becomes — as if through Hedda’s eyes — both a little more tiresome and a little stranger; each character seems more and more to exist as a collection of caricatured props and gestures: Thea’s silk scarf and blank gaze, the Judge’s cigar and macho splayed legs, George’s red sweater-vest and nerdy pursed mouth. Seen as if from the increasingly unhinged perspective of Hedda, these are characters who have no meaning for their own sakes, only for their places in her configurations of power. The technique also effectively sets Hedda apart as the center of her own universe, as the one consistent and most important personality amid a lot of slapstick, mechanism, and absurdity.

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