The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Books  |  Comedy  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Best2012Vote-1000x50

On Burr's survival

The Duel imagines New England's secession carried through in NH
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  January 18, 2006

PLAYED OUT: A dueling history.In the rancorous aftermath of the 2004 elections, the media showered us with maps of what an all-blue US might look like, removed from the Jesusland of the red states. One demographic’s desire to walk out on the other is certainly nothing new in this nation, and even before the South decided to try going its own way in 1861, there were folks up in New England and New York who were entertaining the idea themselves. Secessionist sentiment up north never made it into action, but one New Hampshire playwright has now asked, What if? The hinge of James Patrick Kelly’s new alternative history of early 19th-century America, The Duel (directed by Blair Hundertmark at the West End Studio Theatre), swings on the 1804 showdown between Alexander Hamilton (Kevin Collins) and Vice President Aaron Burr (Steve Bornstein).

A peeved Burr called for the duel after Hamilton, who disapproved of what he thought were Burr’s secessionist leanings, talked some trash about him at a dinner party, effectively derailing the VP’s bid for the New York governorship. Kelly’s two-act script starts us off amid this “real” history, a build-up to the duel based on historical documents, and at the end of the first act, the guns are fired. We see Hamilton’s aim miss by a mile, just as history has it. But in Kelly’s reimagining of the duel, Burr puts his bullet into the ground instead of Hamilton’s abdomen. Hamilton lives on another seven years and into the fictional Act Two, by which time Burr’s ambitions have taken an extreme turn, and have helped to split the North off into the rebel Confederation of New England States.

To watch all this is to watch the dramatization of an intellectual exercise. Kelly’s twelve characters give us the political background that supports his alternate version of history — in letters exchanged between Burr and Hamilton, recitations of all the dirt the Founders eventually dished on each other, laborious exposition of the inextricable political and personal. His imagined secession is a fascinating hypothetical, but, as drama, sometimes errs — perhaps inevitably — on the side of education. The history — real and imagined — is dense stuff, exhaustively researched and delivered, and it often slows the story’s pace.

As if in compensation, the script frequently swings around to linger briefly on common, human things — Burr’s sensualist and proto-feminist ways with women; Eliza Hamilton’s worries about her husband. Act Two shows us the hard times of regular New England folk by taking us into the impoverished house of the Kelseys. There, Rachel and Polly (Kathleen Somssich and Lisa Richardson) await the return of young Confederation soldier Jonathan (while harboring Burr, now a fugitive from the Union armies). The Duel is at its best when it bridges the politics and the people, and does more showing than telling about the political climate — as when Confederation sergeant Levi Claggett (Thomas Olson) hisses that he’s fighting a government that can cut trees down from his land and “doesn’t know me or care about me.”

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Mixin' it up, Basking in life, Into new worlds, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Entertainment, Armed Forces, Performing Arts,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/13 ]   "Aphrodite and the Gods of Love"  @ Museum of Fine Arts
[ 02/13 ]   "Processes and Dreams"  @ Panopticon Gallery
[ 02/13 ]   "Artists' Books: Books by Artists"  @ Boston Athenæum
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   FEMALE POETS STEP UP TO THE MIC  |  February 08, 2012
    While down in Cambridge last August with a team of Portland poets for the semi-finals of the National Poetry Slam, Tricia Henley Pryce says, she never saw more than one woman up on stage at a time.
  •   MAD HORSE’S BECKY SHAW PEERS BEHIND THE LOVE CURTAIN  |  February 08, 2012
    Three months after her father's death, the two people closest to thirty-something Suzanna (Elizabeth Chambers) don't have a lot of patience for her grief, which has her reduced to a weeping mess watching bad TV under a blanket.
  •   GOOD THEATER WRESTLES WITH LOVE AND SIN  |  February 01, 2012
    There's only one major problem in the love between Adam (Rob Cameron), a sarcastic would-be teacher working in retail, and Luke (Joe Bearor), an aspiring young actor.
  •   PUBLIC THEATER TRIES TO SAVE DISAPPEARING COMMUNICATION  |  February 01, 2012
    George (James Hoban) has a knack for languages: He's a polyglot, can lovingly conjugate all tenses of even Esperanto, and has dedicated his life to preserving tongues on the brink of extinction.
  •   THESPIAN GAMES AT THE THEATER PROJECT  |  January 25, 2012
    Five people lie supine on the floor, feet outward, like a star.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed