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Shadowy Hues
Keith Bunin's prickly tale of a trio of art forgers
conjures a counterfeit of its own
BY RONALD MANGRAVITE
| By a recent count, more
than 300 theatrical productions are staged each
year in South Florida -- just about one new show
a day. Of course, it doesn't work out so neatly
-- most shows open on or near the weekends and
go up against an array of competing openings.
That certainly was the case at the start of March,
when at least eight theaters premiered new productions,
some in the same ZIP code. The wide range of dramatic
choices may make the local theater scene a publicist's
nightmare, but for ticket buyers, it's heaven.
That's the case in Coral Gables, where two crackerjack
companies, the New Theatre and GableStage at the
Biltmore, opened new productions, both Florida
premieres, on back-to-back nights. |
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The Credeaux Canvas at the
New Theatre is a prickly, unsentimental look at struggling
artists in Manhattan. The setting is a seedy downtown
artists' loft, where a young art student, Winston,
lives and paints, to little avail. His real job is
as a library clerk, and he's frustrated by his inability
to get a break in the brutal New York art scene. His
roommate, Jamie, is a tightly wound rich kid with
suicidal tendencies and a loathing of his art-dealer
father, who dies leaving Jamie disinherited. Jamie's
girlfriend, Amelia, has her own disappointments. A
wannabe singer, she's also relegated to a thankless
dead-end job. All are desperate for some cash, and
Jamie has a plan. It seems that Winston has a knack
for copying the paintings of dead masters. For a school
project, he once copied a painting by an obscure French
artist, Jean Paul Credeaux, and Jamie thinks he can
pass off one of Winston's fakes as the real thing
to a gullible art buyer. The others balk, but Jamie
works on them, and they agree to create another Credeaux
canvas, with Amelia posing nude for Winston. But while
Winston paints Amelia by moonlight, the original forgery
plan takes a sudden erotic detour.
The play was written by a talented
young New Yorker, Keith Bunin. The playwright neatly
sets up his characters and their shaky forgery caper,
then creates a forgery of his own by inventing Credeaux,
an imaginary person whose work, technique, and place
in the development of modern art is described with
such detail and verve, it really seems as if there
were such a painter. Bunin's observation of the traits
and habits of the urban art scene are dead-on perfect,
and to his credit, he doesn't try to sentimentalize
or elevate his characters. Though these three are
likable in the early going, their story soon gets
nasty indeed. When it does, Bunin doesn't try to apologize
for what the characters do. The same applies to Rafael
de Acha's production, which is beautifully staged
but deliberately stark. Scenes and acts end without
fanfare or codas. Rather, they just evaporate, like
these friendships do.
The cast is strong. Brian Louis Hoffman
makes a dazzling South Florida debut as the peripatetic,
lithium-deprived Jamie. Leif Gilbertson, who scored
as an edgy, aggressive student in GableStage's The
Shape of Things, does a complete 180 as the languid,
amoral painter Winston, who doesn't mind who he sleeps
with as long as the fling is fun and short. Aubrey
Shavonn's Amelia is believably unhappy and conflicted,
but her flat vocal rendering and lack of humor makes
the character hard to watch after a while. The production
gets a real boost when Kimberly Daniel makes an all-too-brief
one-scene appearance as the uptown art buyer, Tess.
Tess is so completely vibrant, the three friends suddenly
look cheap and dirty for trying to cheat her, an essential
plot turn that Daniel aces in a memorable performance.
As is now the standard at the New Theatre, the production
staff turns in excellent work. Michael McKeever's
dingy yellow artists' garret is starkly realistic,
yet Travis Neff's lighting transforms it at times
with romantic moonlight and shadows.
Meanwhile GableStage presents a different,
equally stark look at creative life in Tabletop. This
off-Broadway hit is set in a commercial film studio,
which is jammed with camera, tripods, lights, stands,
and electrical boxes and all the jumble of equipment
that makes up a professional film set. But this studio
is different. It specializes in "product shots,"
or "tabletop," the insert shots of products
featured in television commercials. There are no actors
or dialogue filmed here, just ultra-detailed closeups
of "the hero," industry slang for the product
itself.
The work looks easy, but it isn't.
The days are long and the routine is relentless, and
so is the fanatical attention to detail. The crew's
production assistant, Ron (Michael Vines), is gung-ho
for his job, which he sees as completely creative.
But the regular crew members think otherwise. Prop
man Jeffrey (Paul Tei) has a bitter, jaundiced view
of television and commercials and spends a lot of
time defending his turf and taking claim for Ron's
ideas. Camera assistant Dave (Joe Kimble) just does
his job, preoccupied with a new secret love affair.
Grip/gaffer Oscar (John Archie) wants out, with a
plan to start his own business. And the intense Andrea
(Pamela Roza), the company's assistant director/script
supervisor/production manager, just wants to get the
day's work done. All are tyrannized by their boss,
Marcus (George Schiavone), a foul-mouthed ranter who
screams at anyone and everything in his range -- especially
Ron.
Playwright Rob Ackerman has created
a hyperrealistic, real-time, "slice of life"
story based on his own experience in the tabletop
trade. Realism is the operative word. The script is
crammed with so many film expressions, the dialogue
must sound like Aramaic to the uninitiated. The hyperreality
is further intensified by director Joseph Adler's
long experience as a commercial director (hopefully
not as a screaming meanie like Marcus) and the production
background of several of the actors. Adler's staging,
natural but clean, is incredibly detailed: He has
six people doing simultaneous, seemingly separate
tasks that must be orchestrated and timed together
without anyone noticing. Adler intensifies the natural
feel by holding back all conventional theatrical elements;
this show has no music, no atmospheric sound effects.
Lighting designer Jeff Quinn works with no obvious
stage lights other than working lights used in the
filming, and no one is credited with costume design
for the nondescript clothing the characters wear.
Add Tim Connelly's sprawling, detailed film set, and
the experience feels more like watching real life
than a dramatic construct.
That's the intention, and that's good,
on the whole. While the direction and acting are first-rate,
there's not much story here, and the proceedings sag.
Ackerman tries too hard to land some points about
creative integrity, selling out, and the evils of
commercial advertising, but this all feels schematic.
Each character seems at times to exist primarily as
an example of human frailty, like the seven sins in
a medieval morality tale. But that's a cavil. The
attraction here is not the story; it's the skillful
production and the insiders' look at the film business,
a subject that holds a fascination for many.
Fuente:
New Times
Marzo 2003
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