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SMALL IRONIES: A Novel

Three Continents

From the ship at sea 1

From the ship at sea 2

From the ship at sea 3

From the ship at sea, 4

From the ship at sea, 5

From the ship at sea , 6

From Rio!!

The Trip Home

NEW SHORT STORIES

Nothing There For You

Nothing There For You, 2

Nothing There For You, 3

Nothing There For You, 4

Chase of The Thrill, 1

Chase of the Thrill, 2

Chase of the Thrill, 3

Chase of The Thrill, 4

Of Course, part1

Of Course, part 2

Of Course, part 3

Of Course, concluded

In Memory: Of My Cruise 1

In Memory: Of My Cruise 2

In Memory: Of My Cruise 3

In Memory: Of My Cruise 4

Las Vegas, 1

Las Vegas, 2

Las Vegas, 3

Las Vegas, 4

Las Vegas, concluded

Mad Moment #1

Mad Moment #2

Mad Moment #3

Mad Moment #4

Margaret Never Knows, 1

Margaret Never Knows, 2

Margaret Never Knows, 3

Margaret Never Knows, 4

Margaret Never Knows, 5

Remote, part 1

Remote, part 2

Remote, part 3

Remote, concluded

POETRY

April's Fools

Easter Sunday

...simple answers

And when they come at me

Fogged In

BROADWAY/NYC THEATRE

Love, Linda

Curtains

Barrington Stage Co. 2011

10X10 On North

My Name is Asher Lev

The Game

The Best of Enemies

Mormons, Mothers...etc.

Going to St. Ives

Guys and Dolls

Zero Hour

BSC ARCHIVED REVIEWS

Absurd Person Singular

Art

BNelson's All-Male Revue

Carousel

The Crucible

The Fantasticks

Freud's Last Session

I Am My Own Wife

The Memory Show

Mysteries of Harris Burdi

Pool Boy

Private Lives

See Rock City. . .

Sleuth

...Spelling Bee

A Streetcar Named Desire

Sweeney Todd

This Wonderful Life

To Kill a Mockingbird

Trumbo

Underneath the Lintel

The Violet Hour

The Whipping Man

Berkshire Opera

Le Nozze di Figaro

La Boheme

Berkshire Theatre 2011

Colonial Christmas Carol

Birthday Boy

Period of Adjustment

In the Mood

Dutch Masters

Sylvia

The Who's Tommy

Moonchildren

BTF ARCHIVED REVIEWS

BTF Archive

Babes in Arms

The Book Club Play

Broadway by the Year

Candida

Candide

The Caretaker

A Christmas Carol

Christmas Carol 2010

A Delicate Balance

The Einstein Project

Eleanor: Her Secret Journ

Endgame

Eric Hill's Macbeth

Faith Healer

The Guardsman

Ghosts

K2

The Last Five Years

A Man For All Seasons

No Wake

Noel Coward in Two Keys

Pageant Play

Prisoner of 2nd Avenue

Red Remembers

Sick

Waiting for Godot

Chester Theatre Company

Tilted House

The Dishwashers

Almost, Maine

Blackbird

Copake Theatre Company

Nine Months

I Do! I Do!

Sour Grapes

Talking Heads

Grace & Glorie

Dorset Theatre Fest 2011

Mauritius

Noises Off

Dial "M" For Murder

Superior Donuts

DORSET ARCHIVED REVIEWS

Fallen Angels

The Hollow

June Moon

Marry Me a Little

Merton of the Movies

Murder on the Nile

St. Nicholas

The Novelist

The Pavilion

A Year with Frog and Toad

Ghent Playhouse

Madwoman of Chaillot

Pack of Lies

Urinetown

Menagerie A Trois

Ghent's "Dial M...."

Ghent Playhouse Archives

Belles

The Boys Next Door

Clue: The Musical

Complete Wm Shakespeare

Dancing at Lughnasa

Enchanted April

Fantasticks

Hair Loom!

Hay Fever

The Heiress

Jack and the Beanstalk

Lost: The Grimm Years

Mrs. Farnsworth

Over the River, etc.

Picnic

Prisoner/2nd Avenue

Puss in Boots

6 Women...

You're a Good Man, Charli

Literature

B ob Dylan

Christmasville

A Lesser Saint

Upstreet, #1

Mac-Haydn Theatre 2011

Carousel at the Mac

Mac-Haydn's Grease

Swing!

Jekyll and Hyde

The King and I

Annie

Love a Piano

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Anything Goes

Beauty and the Beast

Bye Bye Birdie

Chicago

Chorus Line

Crazy For You

Damn Yankees

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Hello, Dolly!

High Society

Joseph. . .Dreamcoat

Mame

Meet Me in St. Lou

Phantom

The Secret Garden

Show Boat

The Sound of Music

Sweet Charity

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Mary Verdi: Precious Love

Mahagonny

New Stage Theatre Company

Blood Sky

Fahrenheit 451

The Maids

NYSTI

Romeo & Juliet

And Then There Were None

King Island Christmas

A Legend of Sleepy Hollow

The Philadelphia Story

Yours, Anne

Orphan Train

Of Mice and Men

Twelve Angry Jurors

Anastasia

1776

Macbeth

Miracle On 34th Street

Arsenic and Old Lace

American Soup

Ordeal By Innocence

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Oldcastle Theatre 2011

Night and Her Stars

Last Days of Mickey & Jea

Rembrandt's Gift

OLDCASTLE ARCHIVED REVIEW

"Almost, Maine" in VT

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The Grass is Greener

One Two Three

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Shakespeare & Co-2011

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Broadway in the Berkshire

Baskervilles (Revisited)

Romeo and Juliet, 2011

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As You Like It

The Memory of Water

SHAKES & CO ARCHIVES

The Actors Rehearse...

All's Well That Ends Well

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Cindy Bella

Real Inspector Hound

Dreamer Examines Pillow

Goatwoman of Corvis Count

Golda's Balcony

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Pinter's Mirror

Richard III

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Sea Marks

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The Taster

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White People

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Trial of F.D.R.

Autres Temp. . .

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Four Dogs and a Bone

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Stop Kiss

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Life Is Short

Paris, 1890--Unlaced

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Her Name is Vincent

Property Known as Garland

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Doubt, a Parable

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Taming of The Shrew

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I Love a Piano

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Rent

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Ten Cents a Dance

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She Stoops To Conquer

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Three Hotels

Streetcar Named Desire

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After the Revolution

The Atheist

Beyond Therapy

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Children

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Fifth of July

A Flea in Her Ear

Funny Thing/Forum

Funny Thing II

It's Jewdy's Show

Knickerbocker

The Last Goodbye

Quartermaine's Terms

Samuel J. and K.

She Loves Me

Six Degrees of Separation

Three Sisters

The Torch-Bearers

True West

What is..Cause of Thunder

WTF's Our Town

The Actors Rehearse the Story of Charlotte Salomon by David Bridel, Penny Kreitzer and Jonathan Rest. Directed by Jonathan Rest.

Reviewed by J. Peter Bergman


"Let’s give Penny a moment, shall we?"


Charlotte Salomon - self portrait

          One woman shows are running rampant these days; likewise one man shows, but at Shakespeare and Company we are dealing with the Diva series and that means the women have the spotlight. The second offering at the Lenox, Massachusetts campus of the company is a play within a play about a play, performed by one woman who lived two-thirds of this triad. Her name is Penny Kreitzer and she was directed in a play by and about Charlotte Salomon, a young woman, an artist, who died during World War II. Kreitzer, who also co-authored the framework play and its internal elements, lived the role that she plays of Penny Kreitzer at two different theaters in 1973 and 1984. She and her friends have created a theater experience that must feel like constant therapy to the actress who not only relives a major moment in her own life, but who also lived the lives of the two women central to the inner play, Salomon and her step-mother, classical singer Paula Lindberg-Salomon.

          Charlotte lived in Berlin; her mother was a suicide when the girl was nine; her grandmother who took her in to help protect her from the Nazis committed suicide as soon as the war broke out for real. As a refugee in France she painted more than a thousand pictures, including the 769 that comprised her "play" Leben? Oder Theater? Ein Singspiel (Life? Or Theater? A play with songs). The play and pictures survived in the home of a friend and are in a permanent display at the Joods Historiche Museum in Amsterdam.

          Charlotte’s stepmother was a famous contralto, Paula Lindberg-Salomon. Their relationship was a tricky one, involving a man named Alfred Wolfsohn who coached Paula in voice and, according to the play within the play was also the lover of Charlotte. The principal plot point for framework play, other than the quality of Penny’s singing voice, was the inclusion of Wolfsohn in Charlotte’s play and whether it would be appropriate to exercise the right of exclusion, or call it by its other name if you prefer - censorship, in keeping him out of it, something desired by Paula.

          Kreitzer plays all of these characters, and more; I counted ten but I may have missed one or two. Charlotte’s story covers just about 25 years in her life. Paula’s story concerning the rehearsals of her step-daughter’s play and its aftermath also covers about 25 years in her life (she was 103 when she died). Kreitzer’s tale has taken her 25 years through time from 1984 to the present. There is no mystery to the outer connection, but what is a wonder is the inner connection these three women have.

          Part of that connection is the dramatic glue that holds things together throughout the one hour and ten minute play: the character of director Joyce Miller who is trying to rehearse the character Penny in the role of Charlotte. Joyce, for me, is the real central character here. She understands Penny’s difficulties with the role, especially under the circumstance of rehearsing in front of the girl’s step-mother who has come to Jerusalem to watch the production process. Joyce is kept hopping as Penny falters, fearful of offending Paula. Joyce is caught in a dilemma as Paula insists on critiquing every gesture and vocal inflection Penny brings to the part of Charlotte. Joyce is also caught in the vice-like grip of Paula’s insistence that Wolfsohn’s character be deleted, thereby leaving the play they are rehearsing with a major element lost and realizations unreachable.

          Joyce’s growing frustration helps Penny create believable characters, so real that even Paula is subdued by her work. Paula’s anger and sense of humiliation over her teacher’s betrayal of her hard-won trust forces Joyce’s emotional hand and it is Penny, the character, who helps everyone including us understand that Joyce cannot abandon her children, her family within the walls of their workshop, which by the way is a bomb shelter in Jerusalem.

          What we don’t see, I think, is the play created by Charlotte, but only the accidental elements of it that are necessary for Kreitzer's own play. Paula asks for more pictures from Charlotte’s ouvre and we ask the same thing. What we know of the girl is reflected in her words and about twelve or thirteen projections. In one of the best scenes in the play the nine year old girl tries on her new stepmother’s shoes, makeup and demeanor in an effort to get to know her. Here Kreitzer plays the child Charlotte, and that child’s conception of her new mother, along with her actual stepmother, and herself in commentary. It is the sort of magical instant transformation that Kreitzer handles brilliantly.

          In a single, simple costume without fashion elements, using body language and subtle vocal changes, she manages to differentiate not just characters but periods of time. We know when she is in the immediate now and when she is in her own past. We know when she is male and when she is female, young and old. She makes those changes work the way a magician makes an elephant disappear right before your eyes.

          The lighting by Greg Solomon and the open space set by Kiki Smith add to the theatrical magic of a solo performance embodying many folks. Jonathan Rest, who has helped to create the script directs Kreitzer and Solomon (lighting guy) perfectly in order to keep our interest focused on what is important here, the text and the actress that text is linked to like a chain-link fence when each diamond shaped hole contains a different image.

          Is this worth your time? That is more difficult a question than "was Charlotte Salomon a brilliant artist and playwright." The hour and ten minutes does not fly by. So much is crammed into it that it feels like you’ve been in the theater a lot longer. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? Is that a thing at all? There are more questions brought into the forefront with this play than are answered or even answerable. This is an experience. That’s all that can be said of it.

◊06/03/09◊

Penny Kreitzer as Paula Lindberg-Salomon; photo: Kevin Sprague
As the child Charlotte; photo: Kevin Sprague

The Actors Rehearse the Story of Charlotte Salomon plays at the Elayne P. Bernstein Theater on the Shakespeare & Company campus at 70 Kemble Street, Lenox, MA through June 14 and returns for a single performance on September 12. For schedules and tickets call the box office at 413-637-3353 or find them on line at www.shakespeare.org.


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