A View From The Bridge
By Arthur Miller
Family Guy
Yes, we’re back. Do we have to make excuses for our absence?
We think not – after all, you’re reading
this blog and hopefully hooked like a fish on bait or a side of meat hung in an abattoir.
;) Nor, unlike some others, will our narration misdirect you. This is a
wonderful production of Arthur Miller’s 1950s’ fable, A View From The Bridge, with not a dud coin
amongst the performances.
At the same time, TLT and her well-oiled and speedy-wheeled chariot
have to admit, although they would always race to a Miller play, they have
always found his writing a little – well
- schematic. Yet in their humble opinion, the rendering of director Ivo van Hove, along with Jan Versweyveld's design and lighting, of A View From The Bridge turns this into
a strength.
At the height of an economic crisis, the arrival of a wife's
cousins as illegal immigrants from the old country disturbs the tenuous status quo
of the Italian-Brooklyn Carbone family: Eddie (Mark Strong), good natured patriarch eventually descending into despairing self-defeating revenge, Beatrice (Nicola Walker), torn between her family and her isolated
husband, and Eddie’s young niece Catherine (Phoebe Fox), chafing at the bit to experience life.
A simple stretched length-wise stage – without props, bare-bones black and white with long box benches rising on every
side can change within a few words into a dockyard pier, a Brooklyn home, an
attorney’s office, a boxing ring or maybe even a court house foyer, a political
cell, an international conference room -
or a man trap.
Cousin Marco (Emun Elliott) sets out methodically to
earn precious dollars to send back to his own wife and children in Italy but,
to the horror of her Uncle Eddie, Catherine is charmed by ambitious Rodolpho
(Luke Norris) with his matinee-idol looks.
Yet there is an explicit indication this play means
more than the one man’s tragic (alleged) incestuous, jealous obsession. The two Italians
speak perfect American from the start, although TLT and her motorised compatriot willingly took part in the audience's suspension of disbelief, while glimpsing the possibility of parallel stories.
Alongside a masterly use of sound (Tom Gibbons), lighting and choreography, the staging reminded TLT
of a previous Young Vic production – the circular heartbeat simplicity of The Brothers Size. And like Richard Eyre’s recent absorbing
Ghosts,
this production gathers momentum by eschewing an interval (back to its one-act
verse roots) and the two hours fly past.
The twists and turns
of this piece’s tragic trajectory and
insistent lawyer-narrator demand attention and open up the possibility of an audience analysing the action and words for
itself rather than accepting the say-so
about any character from others.
Naturally the pacing is superb with seemingly sympathetic
but seedy lawyer Alfieri (Michael Gould) and the increasingly tortured and
trapped longshoreman Eddie Carbone juggling the action until all hell breaks
out and events spiral out of their control.
A minor quibble alone - for us, using coloured lighting in the denouement might have
made a more visceral impact than a final prolonged clinch in an actual liquid tide, although
(we think) we can understand the reasoning for this.
Anyway this may seem rather churlish as, for us too, the tragic human consequences acted on an anosmic (look
it up! :) ) set of otherwise almost digital
cleanliness gives the play recognizable currency in our globalized electronic
age of video games and drones. A great ensemble effort to which TLT and her
rootin’, tootin’ buggy give an unadulterated green light!
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