Orpheus Descending

Brรผka Theatreโ€™s rendition of Tennessee Williamsโ€™ Orpheus Descending competently carries the heavy weight of this challenging and moving story. But despite his remarkable storytelling talents, Tennessee Williams is a real bummer.

His main characters struggle in vain for freedom, coming just close enough to touch it before plunging once again into what Orpheusโ€™ protagonist, Val Xavier, calls, โ€œsolitary confinement inside our own skins, for life.โ€ Such a remark gives some indication of the tone of Orpheus, which in Williamsโ€™ typically overwrought fashion seems to be asking, โ€œWhatโ€™s the point in trying? Everything sucks anyway.โ€

The play was loosely inspired by the Greek tragedy of Orpheus, a musical genius whose wife, Eurydice, dies and descends to Hades. He goes down after her, and receives strict instructions for Eurydiceโ€™s safe return: Play a song, have her follow you, and never look back until youโ€™re both out of the underworld. But he canโ€™t resist temptation; he looks back anyway, sending Eurydice back to Hades forever.

Orpheus never quite received the critical attention that Williamsโ€™ better-known works did, likely because it simply tries to do too much, so itโ€™s not clear what, exactly, it wants to be.

While those original themesโ€”love, rescue from Hell, temptation, and the evils of looking backโ€”exist here too, theyโ€™re played out in a โ€™50s-era Southern town, which also wrestles with racial and ethnic intolerance, Christian fire and brimstone, sexual repression, female oppression, and the vain struggle to reform oneโ€™s self. All that combined with a lot of melodramatic dialogue is a tall order. Here, it provides mixed results.

Val Xavier (Bradford Kaโ€™aiโ€™ai), the central figure, is a guitar-toting, snakeskin jacket-wearing loner who channels Elvis Presley, with irresistible sexual appeal and a dark past he triesโ€”and failsโ€”to live down. He breezes into town on the invitation of the sheriffโ€™s wife, Vee Talbott (Moira Bengochea), who is prone to spiritual visions that seem to foretell how this story will turn out.

Val, like a fox in a chicken coop, arrives at the townโ€™s dry goods store, the playโ€™s setting, as the town gossips dish the dirt on the storeโ€™s owner, Lady Torrance (Holly Natwora). Lady is the daughter of an Italian immigrant bootlegger who was killed by the Klan for selling booze to a black man. Lady eventually married Jabe Torrance, the hateful old man who owns this store and is now dying of cancer.

Despite local floozy Carol Cutrereโ€™s attempts to seduce Val, and despite nosy rumor-mongerers keeping watch over Ladyโ€™s behavior, the two are like moth and flame.

During her breathless Act I monologue, Cutrere (Mary Bennett) acts as a sort of Greek chorus when she says, โ€œWhat on earth can you do on this earth but catch at whatever comes near you, with both your fingers, until your fingers are broken?โ€ Val and Lady attempt to carve out their own little piece of heaven in the dry goods store, but end up with broken fingers nonetheless.

Time and again I am reminded why Kaโ€™aiโ€™ai and Natwora are two of the areaโ€™s busiest local actors; theyโ€™re also two of the most gifted, and are capable of embodying nearly any sort of character. They even deal effectively with their charactersโ€™ accents, which isnโ€™t easy (especially for Natworaโ€™s character, a Sicilian).

Then again, as someone who grew up in North Carolina and Georgia, Iโ€™m fairly intolerant of bad Southern accents, and there were several here among the minor roles.

And frankly, Williamsโ€™ already over-the-top language was frequently delivered with too much histrionics that, instead of provoking my emotions, made me roll my eyes.

Ultimately, though, I did ache for Val and Lady. Though I left the theater feeling bummed, it was mostly because I cared what happened to them, and thatโ€™s a good thing.

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