29 March 2019

Dispatches from Israel 17

by Helen Kaye

[Earlier this week (26 March), I posted two of Helen Kaye’s reviews  from the Jerusalem Post, Sholem Asch’s God of Vengeance (1906) and :Paula Vogel’s Indecent (2017), both at the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv.  A few days after Helen sent me those pieces, she sent me four more—from the end of 2018 and the beginning of 2019.  Here are those notices: one from the Habima Theater, Israel’s national theater (My Mika by Gadi Inbar); one from the Gesher Theater (Lolita/Jeanne d’Arc by Yeheskel Lazarov); and two more from the Cameri (Who’s a Jew by Jean-Claude Grumberg and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Dale Wasserman).  It’s an eclectic collection of productions.  As for the rest, I’ll let Helen tell you.  ~Rick]

My Mika
By Gadi Inbar
Directed by Moshe Kepten
Habima Theater, Tel Aviv; 10 October 2018

“These are the songs I grew up on,” exuberantly declared a lady in the foyer of Habima, “this is the second time I’ve come to see the show.” The songs she speaks of are those by much loved song-writer Yair Rosenblum (1944-96), all 22 of them, plus a five-song medley that fuel the close to three hour overlong musical My Mika, a superbly conceived and executed revival of an epic melodrama that was first done at the Bet Zvi Drama School in 2003.

The story concerns a fraught period in Israeli history, stretching from just before the 1967 Six Day War, and the triumphalism that ensued, to the chastening aftermath of the almost disastrous 1973 Yom Kippur war.

Mika (Amit Farkash) and her friends are graduating from high-school, exhilarated by a future whose possibilities they anticipate. Then comes the ’67 war. Mika’s boy-friend Gidi (Nadir Eldad), deeply traumatized (PTSD) by it, repudiates her, his holocaust survivor mother Hanka (Miki Kamm) and all his friends, and decamps for America. When, after several years, he returns it is to find that Mika is about to wed Ari (Matan Shavit) who has become religious and divorced Noa (Revital Zalman), his childhood sweetheart. Kadosh (Ya’akov Cohen), Mika’s shopkeeper Dad, hovers approvingly. Venal, yet goodhearted Meni (Moshe Ashkenazi) and Debbie (Oshrat Ingedashet) are a happy family, and Elisha (Doron Brookman) observes – as he tends to do – from the edge. Then comes the Yom Kippur war and their world almost shatters.

Realising that adverse criticism may well be considered sacrilege, it still does not really do to take what is essentially a high-school level musical – perhaps to educate an oblivious generation to the time – and dress it up in adult trappings. That said, these are truly amazing from the intricacies of Eran Atzmon’s multilevel smoothly mobile set to Yelena Kelrich’s spot on period costuming, to Keren Granak’s dramatic lighting and to Shai Boder’s stunning video art. Oz Morag’s choreography achieves masterpiece level. That it and the music incorporate echoes of West Side Story are not coincidence as some of the musicals’ thinking is similar.

Above all, punctuated by wars as our existence here is, Mika shows the all but overwhelming centrality of the Army to Israeli life and values.

As always, when it comes to musicals Kepten’s direction soars and his actors take flight. It goes without saying that both Kamm and Cohen are superb. Indeed, Cohen’s sly humor has the audience giggling mightily. The rest, soloists and chorus are also very, very good, with a ‘but’ in there. As Mika and Gidi, Farkash and Eldad need to inhabit their characters more from within, and the same goes for Zalman and Shavit; Eldad, however, beautifully portrays Gidi’s self-absorption. Ashkenazi’s Meni is a steady and steadying presence, but most of the acting honors go to Ingedashet and Brookman whose empathic Debbie and principled, brave Elisha are very real.

This is a musical. A musical has songs and singing actors to present them. Unfortunately they were so over-amped that who knows what their voices, often pleasing despite the elevated decibels, actually sound like.

The Ammunition Hill number in Act I was breath-taking. Act II, the lead-up to the Yom Kippur War was tighter, more dramatic and stronger for it, and if you are not awash in tears by the powerful ending, then you have tungsten for a heart.

Fitting or not, quibbles or not, if you freeze dry this My Mika, then shrink wrap and export it as the distillation of what it means to be Israeli, perhaps we’d be better understood, not to mention that it’d sell out in a moment.

[Bet Zvi (or Beit Zvi as the school spells its English name) School for the Performing Arts in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, is the first theater school in Israel that’s unaffiliated with an established theater.  Established in 1950, Beit Zvi emphasizes acting in real productions and established a theater at the school for graduates that mounts plays not staged by the country’s repertory theaters.]

*  *  *  *
Lolita/Jeanne d’Arc
Adapted, staged and designed by Yeheskel Lazarov
Gesher Theater, Tel Aviv; 10 December 2018

First of all, congratulations are in order to Gesher, Yekezkel Lazarov, Israel (Sasha) Demidov and Doron Tavori. To Gesher, which, since its first performances in the early ‘90s, has never been afraid to stick its neck out, to Lazarov for, on the face of it, a most unlikely combination of heroines, and to actors Demidov and Tavori for bravura performances.

Lolita follows the iconic book by Vladimir Nabokov on Humbert Humbert, an aging and mentally unstable pedophile’s (Demidov) obsession for the 12 year old daughter of his landlady whom he nicknames Lolita (the voice of Alona Tzimberg). Like the book, the play follows the uneven, exploitive, and ultimately fatal sexual and emotional relationship between the two and between Humbert and the other men (Tavori) in Lolita’s life, from a dogged detective to a famous playwright whom Humbert murders in a jealous rage, thereby leading to his own downfall.

Jeanne d’Arc deals with the trial for heresy in 1431 of Joan (Kiki, a robot with Tzimberg’s voice), canonized in 1920 as a saint. The Inquisitor (Tavori) tries every trick in the book to get Joan to incriminate herself but she eludes him to the end.

To say this pairing is unusual is to put it mildly. On the one hand we have Lolita, a not-so-innocent, conniving, perhaps even amoral, teen. On the other we have Joan, an illiterate 15th century peasant girl, burnt at the stake for heresy, whose (blatantly political) conviction was overturned in 1456, her innocence legally and morally confirmed.

Does it work? Yes. And no.

Yes, because of its daring, because of the staging, because of its two actors, because the juxtaposition of its characters is not a gimmick but a means, shockingly, to communicate ideas that we, the audience, need to acknowledge.

No, because at its worst, specifically in Lolita, it got a little self-indulgent, which is to say that what was needed is more ruthlessness and less dazzle, which Jeanne provided

And Dazzle there is. A group of girls dressed in white practices ballet at the barre. Those same girls bear witness in Jeanne. A white Cadillac convertible – here also the symbol of impermanence – dominates the stage in Lolita. Kiki (Jeanne) is white. White is the color of purity, and of innocence.

In Jeanne faith/innocence meets real-politik. Neither has a chance. In Lolita innocence never has a chance either, because there isn't any. Both the girl and the man are damaged goods. The one exploits the other. In the program Lazarov talks about morality but actually the key to both plays is innocence, also known as virtue, which has gone from the world – World War I took care of that in the previous century – virtue in its most literal sense that is. When last did we hear of someone who is deemed virtuous? The word itself arouses only a snigger nowadays . . .

Lolita also put a strain on the actors in terms of text. There is so much of it that both Demidov and Tavori gabbled to such an extent that a lot of the text was simply unintelligible, the brunt borne by Demidov.

That said, Demidov’s Humbert is a chronically restless, pathetic, uncoordinated, self-justifying, by turns craven, by turns full of bravado creature, all of which makes for a towering performance, a characterization that is utterly believable. The same may be said of Tavori whose various characters emanate slyness and corruption. As the Inquisitor in Jeanne, he is wonderfully intense and focused, so much so that one almost forgets – as one is supposed to – that his antagonist is a robot. Let us not forget the voice of Tzimberg that powers both Lolita (whom we never see) and Joan, both females, both abused by the male world, both in their way indomitable.

So, Lolita, a little flawed, a little prolix and Jeanne, terse, powerful – both worth seeing.

*  *  *  *
Who’s a Jew
By Jean-Claude Grumberg
Hebrew by Rami Baruch
Directed by Amir Wolf
Cameri Theater, Tel Aviv; 29 January 2019

Here’s all you ever wanted to know about being a Jew, belief versus atheism, the Occupation, the Jewish-Palestinian conflict, the difference between a Jew and a non-Jew, and more, all wrapped up in a smart, gloriously funny, marvelously French comedy. To top that Who’s a Jew? also has Rami Baruch as the Jewish neighbor, a playwright, and Shlomo Vishinski as his Catholic counterpart, retired, who’s quizzing his neighbor on behalf of his wife (she gets all her info from the internet), not that he cares one way or the other, of course.

Their encounters take place in the stairwell of their unpretentious Parisian apartment house deftly designed by Shiran Levi who also did the costumes, as unremarkable as the apartment of course. Amir Castro and Rotem Alro’i did the apt lighting.

At first neighbor Jew runs rings around neighbor Catholic, but gradually the boot gets transferred to the other foot, and then . . . . but why spoil the fun?

To say that Baruch (in a curly wig), and Vishinski are a perfect foil one for the other, to say that they hold the audience in the palm of their hand, to say that every line that comes out of their mouths is honed to brilliance is no more than the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

Laughter, they say, is the best medicine, and we’re in dire need. Who’s a Jew? provides a 90 minute welcome alternative to the reality surrounding us.

*  *  *  *
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
By Dale Wasserman
From the book by Ken Keasey
Translated by Ilan ronen
Directed by Omri Nitzan
Cameri Theater, Tel Aviv; 25 February 2019

To paraphrase Dickens, Cuckoo’s Nest is wonderful, Cuckoo’s Nest is dreadful. Wonderful, because director Nitzan and his actors have avoided sentimentality to dig unflinchingly into the dark underbelly of mental illness, save for the (necessarily) mawkish ending, which is not their fault. Dreadful, because Cuckoo’s Nest is an indictment of the human race which gives no quarter, doesn’t allow us to wriggle off the hook as Nitzan’s chilling opening set to the Ode to Joy from Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, and which ends with a looming Mushroom Cloud, amply demonstrates. The play is an allegory with the mental hospital and its inmates as a microcosm of the world we live in.

The story concerns Randle McMurphy (Oz Zehavi), a pugnacious, charismatic non-conformist petty criminal who is sent to the state mental hospital for evaluation. There he comes into contact not only with a motley crew of voluntary and involuntary inmates whose overriding characteristic is fear, but with the manipulative and sadistic Nurse Ratched (Ola Shur-Selektar). The ultimately deadly conflict that develops between the two drives the events of the play. On her side Ratched (an interesting combination of ratchet and wretched) has and exploits the power of the System. On his, Mac (though definitely no angel), has an innate compassion and an irrepressible lust for life. He doesn’t stand a chance, poor sap!

Let’s face it. Despite the relatively enormous strides we have made in treatment of mental illness, we still understand only a very little about it. If we are to be honest, we flinch from it, we would rather not have to face it, let alone deal with it. The mentally ill themselves are still subject to comprehensive abuse, and if they complain ‘who’s gonna believe them? They’re nuts, right?’

These attitudes/ignorances are what Cuckoo’s Nest addresses.

Zehavi makes a persuasive engaging McMurphy, out to get his, to get the best of things and people, but not oblivious to the nuances he finds at the hospital. It’s Shur-Selectar’s unyielding body-language, the small vain touches to her person, the refusal to crank out a stereotype, that make her Ratched so compelling. Top marks too to Ruthie Asarsay for her loose-limbed, uninhibited, unself-conscious Candy – one of her best performances yet, while Mia Landesman cameos riotously as Sandra. Cameri stalwarts Ohad Shahar as Harding, Yitzhak Hiskiya as Scanlon, Ezra Dagan as Martini and Uri Ravitz as Ruckly lean hard on their roles, making each an individual whom we know is leaving so much more unsaid, except that Ruckly – basically a zombie - says never a word. Eran Sarel’s anguished Chief tears at the heartstrings and Moti Katz imbues loud-mouth Cheswick with a humor that would be funny if it weren’t so despairing. As Billy, Shlomi Avraham skillfully manages to be absent most of the time, until he isn’t, and your heart about cracks.

Adam Keller’s functional set and sad-sack costuming allow no illusions, neither does the music which unrelentingly bids “Hello darkness my old friend” (Simon & Garfunkle) amid the hard-hitting rest.

Cuckoo’s Nest is not fun. It’s hard, it’s necessary, and why, you have to ask yourselves are we watching this “j’accuse” in the Israel of today?

[It’s not terribly relevant, but I’ll note it anyway: I played Dr. Spivey, the hospital’s chief shrink, in a production of Cuckoo’s Nest back in 1975.  (It was the same year the film adaptation of the novel [1962] and play [1963] came out.)  It was my first role after getting out of the army in 1974 and attending the American Academy of Dramatic Arts for a year and studying at HB Studio.]

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