In the spirit

Trinity Rep's heartening Christmas Carol
By BILL RODRIGUEZ  |  December 10, 2008

 xmascarol_main
UPLIFTING Jack Feld, Wilson Jr., and Molly Schreiber.


Come the holiday season around here, there may be snow or there may be Indian summer, but one thing that never changes for many families is the tradition of seeing Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol at Trinity Repertory Company (through December 31).

Other regional theaters also milk that sentimental cash cow for all it's worth every year, but Trinity does it differently. Instead of a cookie-cutter version each time, reassuring fans that everything will be exactly the same, they challenge directors to make the show their own. Scrooge will be fine-tuned, perhaps to a slit-eyed curmudgeon, perhaps to a defiant libertarian. The typical emotional tone of the music may be sunny Christmas carols or the dark Dies Irae.

Thankfully, directors start with a solid footing. This version by Trinity founder Adrian Hall and composer Richard Cumming is engagingly told and theatrically skillful. local audiences seem to have agreed over the past 32 years, so much so that in the mid-'90s, the theater started adding performances with a second cast.

This year's director is Cape Town-raised Liesl Tommy, a Trinity Rep Conservatory alum who has appeared here in the holiday favorite, playing Belle and Lucy. Her background informs her take on the tale, both because of her familiarity with the story from the inside and because apartheid was virtually Dickensian in the extremity of its social injustice.

This time around, the director eases us into the tale, establishing the proper mood gently as we first hear a carefully slow "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen," a spotlight gradually dawning on the singer (Holly Cast: Rachael Warren; Ivy Cast: Angela Williams). The opening scene always grabs us at Trinity, because Ebenezer Scrooge is demonstrating his callousness, continuing to count money as his partner is dying next to him. Scrooge (Mauro Hantman; Joe Wilson Jr.) responds heartlessly to Jacob Marley (Russ Salmon; Jimmy King), as his boyhood friend and business partner clutches his chest and collapses. In a good touch, Tommy has Scrooge show distress from his own chest pains now and then, so when his dire prospects for an afterlife are later revealed, dying is more than theoretical to him.

There are more ghosts here than Dickens's customary trio. For example, a masked chorus of specters accompany Marley down to the glowing bowels of hell. Between these Christmas spirits rampant in the show and the happy Christmas spirit in the theater, we keep being reminded that more than entertainment is being offered here.

Trinity featured the Holly cast on opening night, so that's the performance I'll sample here. Hantman's Scrooge is a thoughtful character, frightened for a moment by Marley's heart attack before he recovers his disdain. At the conclusion, his Scrooge's redemption is a relatively calm and meditative process, as the older reprobate's understanding dawns and deepens. (Wilson's Scrooge, in contrast, is giddy with joy.) The anthem near the beginning and at the end is the spiritual "Peace In the Valley," which sings of the lion lying down with the lamb and being "changed from this creature I am" — a perfect description of a Ebenezer's internal reconciliation.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Christmas present, Merry, merry, Drink up!, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Culture and Lifestyle, Holidays, Joe Wilson,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY BILL RODRIGUEZ
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REMIXING SHAKESPEARE  |  May 13, 2013
    From music to costumes to inserted interludes of dance and mad poetry, this staging is vivacious.
  •   A CLOSE ENCOUNTER  |  May 13, 2013
    The set-up couldn't be more straightforward: two strangers are having a conversation in New York's Central Park. Correspondingly, the set couldn't be more simple: a park bench in front of tall color photographs of its bucolic backdrop.
  •   REVIEW: TRATTORIA LONGO  |  May 13, 2013
    Preparing most Italian dishes doesn't require the complexity of organic chemistry. Fresh ingredients, a good recipe, well-timed cooking, and ecco! Benissimo!
  •   SOUR AND DOUR SOULS  |  May 07, 2013
    Some people are brittle and dry as tinder, but they don't have the sense to not play with matches. The two women at the dangerous center of Martin McDonagh's The Beauty Queen of Leenane could blaze up at any moment, and we know that one or both will by the end. Each is filled with so much pent-up hatred that spontaneous combustion seems a distinct possibility.
  •   FOOLS IN LOVE  |  May 07, 2013
    Taking place on the hot Louisiana Gulf Coast, Tennessee Williams's The Rose Tattoo is steamy in more than one way, as human passions boil off repressed emotions.

 See all articles by: BILL RODRIGUEZ