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Clever or klepto?

Third examines dogma, preconceptions
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  October 14, 2009

 theater_Third1_main

HOLDING THEIR OWN What’s the best way to unsettle an ideologue? PHOTO: DARREN SETLOW

A certain branch of modern liberal academia could stand a little likening to Lear, as stubbornly entrenched in its own theories, deconstructions, and Weltanschauungen as it is. In Third, the final work of esteemed playwright Wendy Wasserstein (produced at Portland Stage, under the direction of Paul Mullins), it is personified in the character of Laurie Jameson (Karen MacDonald). A high-power professor at a prestigious New England liberal-arts school, Laurie was part of the radical youth's entrance to academia in the aftermath of the '60s, when she helped transform this college from an all-men's school into a staunchly liberal institution. As for her own values -- knee-jerk feminist, anti-corporate, anti-military, indiscriminately pro-minority-Other, etc. -- even she admits that she hasn't re-evaluated them since she was a student herself.

Her catalyst will be Woodson Bull III, a Midwestern, Groton-educated wrestler, a would-be sports agent, and (possibly) a conservative (played with great candor, humor and sympathy by Nick Dillenburg). He's an utter alien here amid queer theory and the first transgender dorm in America, but he's a lot more game to learn from the liberals here than they are to learn from him. Here he's seen, at best, as a dumb jock; at worst, as an embodiment of the white male heterosexual hegemony that many of the professors rose up against in their own youth.

And he infuriates Laurie. But he's got a sharp and open mind, and happens to know a lot about King Lear, which Laurie's class is studying via demasculization theory texts like Shakespeare and Cross-Dressing. When his own psycho-sexual interpretation is intelligent beyond her expectations of him, her worldview can't handle it, and she accuses him of plagiarism.

Anyone who even skirts academia these days will recognize its language and proclivities: Lear's daughter Cordelia, in Laurie's post-patrimonial critique, has been wrongly "girlified" by the traditional Western reading, made a "typical female victim." Laurie's flaw, though, isn't her angle of feminist critique, but rather her inability to allow for anything outside her black-and-white political schematic. Her flaw, that is, is a reverse-discrimination, a lack of inclusiveness that's opposite but similar to one she once fought against. Thus her daughter Emily (the wryly radiant Sara Murphy), reluctantly enrolled at Swarthmore and dating a bank teller, is disappointing to her in comparison to her other daughter, a lesbian dating an adulterous Guggenheim poet. Thus when Laurie's cancer-stricken friend Nancy, a lefty professor on the academic honesty committee (Maureen Butler, with warmth and wit), votes for Woodson, Laurie doesn't speak with her for months.

Set in the politically acrimonious, red-vs-blue period of 2002-3 (during the build-up to the Iraq war, Wasserstein makes acute points about the narrowness, self-importance, and insularity of liberal ideals when taken to their logical extremes, cordoned off from the lives of "ordinary" people, and let to calcify and divide. This intellectual arrogance, Woodson says to the liberal elite at large, is how it lost the country. And indeed, the shift in discourse and results between the last two elections would seem to have borne him out.

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Related: Breaking away, Facing facts, Owning her identity, More more >
  Topics: Theater , William Shakespeare, Wendy Wasserstein, Wendy Wasserstein,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
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  •   BASKING IN LIFE  |  November 18, 2009
    Nancy and Charlie (Kate Braun and Peter Josephson) have made it to the other side: Their kids are raised, released into the world, and producing their own offspring.
  •   STEP RIGHT IN  |  November 11, 2009
    Laura Reynolds, the young wife of a schoolmaster at a New England boys' boarding school in the '50s, has been advised about her proper role there: "Interested bystander."
  •   SPOT ON  |  November 04, 2009
    After Watergate and an opened China, Nixon’s next most recognized legacy is probably the warning to make sure you know your medium: His infamously sweaty, maladroit television appearance in the Kennedy-Nixon debate was widely perceived to have cost him that year’s presidency.
  •   SOFT THRUSTS  |  October 28, 2009
    Seeking the gore-porn stimulations of mutilations, leather, and fellatio to get your Halloween on? Well, Players’ Ring is offering severed fingers, wanton women with whips, and a very, very demanding master, not to mention a mordant punchline. Rolling Die Productions does it all in the spirit of the early 20th-century French horror spectacles of the Grand Guignol Theater.
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    "The tide goes in, and the tide goes out," refrain the players of Lamplight Dialogues: A Nighttime Journey into the Ghost Lives of Puddle Dock . In the show's setting, the nearly 400-year-old city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the literal tide is the force of the mighty tidal Piscataqua River.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING

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