Like
its crafty female protagonist, Becky Sharp, Vanity Fair—the Pearl Theatre Co.
production that closed this past weekend—was nothing if not ambitious. In adapting
the 1848 “novel without a hero” by William Makepeace Thackeray, actress/playwright Kate Hamill boiled down a sprawling masterpiece covering 30 years
to approximately 20 named characters, embodied by seven actors. It may, in
fact, have moved even faster than social-climbing Becky; events and characters
were compressed, telegraphed even, into somewhat less than 2½ hours. A nuance
or two might have gotten lost along the way, but really, who cares?
“Who
are you to judge?” Becky demanded accusingly of the audience. Who, indeed? The
odds against survival in early 19th century England are stacked
against Becky, the daughter of a Frenchwoman who, scandalously, appeared on the
stage. A governess job might serve the likes of Jane Eyre, but why stop there
when you can aim so much higher?
In
a sense, Becky can be seen as a Regency England precursor of Scarlett O’Hara,
another conniver who uses her intelligence and feminine wiles in a society
upended by a tumultuous war (in the case of Becky, the Napoleonic wars that end
with the bloodbath at Waterloo). At the same time, one has to be a bit careful
about enlisting Thackeray as a proto-feminist, as he gave precious little
assistance to Charlotte Bronte when she asked his help as she and sisters
Emily and Anne tried to get a hearing for their novels in the patriarchal
publishing industry of their time.
But
for the Pearl troupe’s feminist angle, that’s their story, and they were
sticking to it. I thought that viewers might be more vexed by the breathless,
even breakneck pace dictated by director Eric Tucker. Just as Becky careens from one (mis)adventure to another, so do the
tables, chairs, and other furniture that serves as the play’s locales. The
actors sprinted around, too, changing accents, costumes, wigs, even their sex
as most of them assumed multiple roles. It was a challenge to keep it all
straight in the play’s running time.
In
the performance I attended late in the show’s run, the understudy Kaileela Hobby filled in for Hamill,
who originated the role of Becky. It would have been interesting to see how
Hobby physically embodied a Becky she had created on paper, but Ms. Hobby was a
more than capable substitute.
The
other cast member with a single role was Joey Parsons as Becky’s schoolgirl friend Amelia—a thankless part due to the
character’s almost willful naivete. Parsons did all that she could to keep her
from dissolving in a simpering puddle.
Also
of note in this production: Debargo
Sanyal, who gave Amelia’s husband, the doomed rakish soldier George
Osborne, an appropriate Donald Trump-ish pout; Brad Heberlee, who made Amelia’s brother, Jos Sedley, a hilarious
mark for Becky; and Zachary Fine,
equally good as the licentious Lord Steyne and the Stage Manager, a winking
ringmaster for these proceedings.
Last
fall, the Pearl Theatre mounted a fine revival of Shelagh Delaney’s 1958
comedy-drama A Taste of Honey (see my review in this prior post), which,
though a century removed from Vanity
Fair, also spotlights a young woman struggling to rise above circumstance
and class. The two plays could not seem more germane to our own time of limited
horizons and national upheaval. One awaits eagerly what this longtime
Off-Broadway troupe will come up with this fall.
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