Old acquaintance

The Autumn Garden in Williamstown; The Widow’s Blind Date in Gloucester
By CAROLYN CLAY  |  August 22, 2007
insideAUTUMN_IMG_9514all3SL
THE WIDOW’S BLIND DATE: The recipe for violence starts cooking early.

Lillian Hellman turned the pot down from boil to simmer for THE AUTUMN GARDEN, her 1951 attempt to be Chekhovian. Actually, since the play is set in a Gulf Coast “summer guest hotel” about 100 miles from New Orleans, it feels as if Hellman had stuffed Chekhov, Tennessee Williams, and Horton Foote into a bag and shaken it. Devoid of the life-destroying lesbian accusations of The Children’s Hour or the blunt-instrumental Southern family feuding of The Little Foxes, this lively yet discursive examination of disappointed lives is tartly witty yet infused with a shrewd, sad gentility. And though Hellman penned it at 45, it’s as autumnal as the hearty flowerbeds of the title, its denizens past their summer bloom but not dead yet.

Hellman considered The Autumn Garden the best of her plays. So did companion Dashiell Hammett, who not only inspired a couple of the characters but also supplied rewrites. As if to strengthen their assessment, the work is receiving a very satisfying revival by Williamstown Theatre Festival (through August 26). The festival is known for its lavish revisitation of classics, American and otherwise — but given the hectic summer schedule and limited rehearsal time, the name actors you eagerly drove west to see sometimes appear to be acting in different plays. Not this time. The Autumn Garden is fully congealed, like a big Southern-Sunday-supper Jell-O mold, with Allison Janney, Elizabeth Franz, John Benjamin Hickey, Jessica Hecht, Maryann Plunkett, and Mamie Gummer suspended in it like fruit. It’s not ambrosia — as Hellman told the play’s original director, Harold Clurman, “Chekhov’s a much better writer than I am.” But it will do nicely.

It’s set toward the end of the summer of ’49 in the Tuckerman manse; now a seasonal hotel, the place exudes a gossamer, worn-out grandeur. Tonight, however, it’s abuzz with expectation of the arrival of artist Nick Denery, proprietor Constance Tuckerman’s erstwhile fiancé, who 20 years ago decamped for Paris to study painting and met a rich New York woman on the boat, leaving Constance to carry a torch. Also on hand are old acquaintances Ned Crossman, who used to love Constance but now has eyes only for the bottle, and Carrie Ellis, who is vacationing in the company of her wealthy, sharp-tongued mother-in-law and her effeminate son, Frederick. The party is rounded out by General Benjamin Griggs, a veteran of two world wars, and his silly wife, Rose, as well as Constance’s French-born niece, Sophie, who was rescued from post-war poverty and is unenthusiastically engaged to Frederick. Enter the Denerys — appealing if spoiled Nick and his chic, sorrowful shadow of a wife, Nina — to stir the pot. But what’s roiling around in there, apart from a scandal shamefully puny by today’s standards, is the somber realization — voiced by General Griggs in a speech knocked out by Hammett after Hellman had had many an unsuccessful go — that there is no moment at which you can just erase your life in order to turn it around. What’s done is done, even if what’s done is you.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Mighty morsels, Share the health, Hit the dirt! It’s a flan!, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Entertainment, Culture and Lifestyle, Harold Clurman,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY CAROLYN CLAY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   OUT OF AFGHANISTAN  |  September 19, 2012
    Matthew Spangler's stage adaptation of The Kite Runner is so faithful to Khaled Hosseini's 2003 bestseller that you might think the novel a religion.
  •   GILDING THE LILY  |  September 17, 2012
    Princess Diana died in 1997, so that's when Taylor Mac began contemplating The Lily's Revenge , in which, complete with petals and pot, he portrays the titular blossom.
  •   TEN CAN'T-MISS PLAYS FOR THIS FALL  |  September 20, 2012
    Princess Diana died in 1997, so that's when Taylor Mac began contemplating The Lily's Revenge, in which, complete with petals and pot, he portrays the titular blossom.
  •   MARIE ANTOINETTE RULES AT ART  |  September 13, 2012
    Last year, dramatist David Adjmi raised a stir with a site-specific tea party called Elective Affinities , in which four-time Tony winner Zoe Caldwell held court in an Upper East Side townhouse, spinning a small audience into her web of entitlement.
  •   GSC COMMITS CRIMES OF THE HEART  |  September 05, 2012
    It must have seemed a guilty pleasure to dramatist Beth Henley to win the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for Crimes of the Heart.

 See all articles by: CAROLYN CLAY