Stillwater Theatre’s high-octane production
of Italian playwright Dario Fo’s stinging political satire Elizabeth:
Almost by Chance a Woman, staged with admirable wit
and imagination by Matthew Earnest, is a must-see comic drama that
will surely put Meredith College’s resident professional
theater company on the Triangle theatrical map. As play unfolds
in the rather crowded royal bedchambers of England’s Queen
Elizabeth I (1533-1603), in a succession of increasingly surreal
scenes from the fevered mind of its title character, Elizabeth becomes
a veritable juggernaut.
The (not-so-)Virgin Queen (played with great gusto
by Meredith senior theater major Laura Jernigan) is a certifiable
paranoid personality with a plethora of real enemies.
She obsesses over her cousin (the never-seen) Mary Stuart (1542-87),
also known as “Mary, Queen of Scots,” whom she regrets
sending to the chopping block, and her (alleged) former lover,
(the never-seen) Robert Devereux (1566-1601), the second Earl of
Essex, whose calamitous attempt in 1600 to foment a rebellion against
the queen resulted in his trial, imprisonment, and beheading in
1601. Another of Elizabeth’s prize paranoid delusions is
that premier English dramatist William Shakespeare has modeled
the dithering title character in Hamlet, Prince of Denmark after
her royal highness.
There’s an old saying among the McDowell womenfolk
that when the going gets tough, the tough go shopping. In Elizabeth,
the title character opts instead for an extreme makeover, 17th
century-style. Enter the wonderfully weird royal beautician Mama
Zaza (Triangle theater veteran David Klionsky, in the drag role
originally played by dramatist Dario Fo himself).
Laura Jernigan is every inch a wide-eyed mad monarch,
mercurial in her mood swings, beset by faithless lovers, and relentlessly
stalked by a succession of assassins dispatched by her enemies,
both foreign and domestic. David Klionsky, with his constantly
changing accents and five o’clock shadow, gives a scene-stealing
over-the-top performance as a London beauty operator who is a ham
sandwich and a whole plate of deviled eggs short of a picnic.
Meredith senior theater and graphic design major
Maureen Price gives a personable performance as Martha, the queen’s
increasingly appalled chambermaid; Zach Thomas is good as Egerton,
the head of Elizabeth’s secret police; Ryan Nazionale imbues
Thomas, Elizabeth’s latest boy toy, with plenty of personality;
and Matthew Ryan Limerick adds a menacing cameo as an Assassin.
Morgan Hoffman and Brett Stegall are good as Elizabeth’s
tough leather-clad Guards, and Ashley Phillips and Stacie Whitley
make a most expressive Chorus.
Matthew Earnest, who is artistic director of the
Deep Ellum Theatre Ensemble in New York City, orchestrates the
action of Elizabeth with a master’s touch, so that
contemporary comparisons can be made to paranoid political leaders
with secret police at their beck and call. Set designer Deb O and
lighting designers Jamie Cuthrell and Deb O recreate the royal
bedroom in telling detail, with a canopied bed and a large wooden
horse (possibly meant to evoke that nasty rumor about the inglorious
demise of Russian Empress Catherine the Great?); and costume designer
Jamie Cuthrell outfits the cast in an eye-catching array of Renaissance
outfits. Original music by Julie Florin puts the cherry of the
top of this splendid sundae of a comic drama, which will surely
entertain and delight broad-minded audiences.
Stillwater Theatre presents Elizabeth:
Almost by Chance a Woman Tuesday-Saturday, Sept. 25-29,
at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Sept. 30, at 2 p.m. in the Studio Theatre
in Jones Hall at Meredith College, 3800 Hillsborough St., Raleigh,
North Carolina. $15 ($10 students and seniors). 919/760-8757
or http://still-water-theatre.org/cms_dir/ Note: Arts
Access, Inc. of Raleigh, NC (http://www.artsaccessinc.org/)
will audio-describe the 8 p.m. Sept. 29th performance. Queen Elizabeth
I: http://www.elizabethi.org/.
Dario Fo: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1997/fo-bio.html (Nobel
Prize).