The Left Hand of Darkness (Lifeline Theatre): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(refs) |
(nov) |
||
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
==Performances== | ==Performances== | ||
* November 1994 - January 1995, Lifeline Theater, Chicago, Illinois | * November 1994 - January / March 19) 1995, Lifeline Theater, Chicago, Illinois | ||
==Reviews, discussions, etc.== | ==Reviews, discussions, etc.== | ||
* ''The Chicago Tribune'' | * Lawrence Bommer, [http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1995-02-07/news/9502070157_1_planet-ursula-le-guin-love-story "Sci-fi Tale Has Chills: Lifeline and Le Guin Build Another World"], ''The Chicago Tribune'', Feb. 7, 1995. "Lifeline Theatre's premiere, meticulously adapted by director Meryl Friedman, takes us on an absorbing 180-minute journey through this complex and corrective society. Our guide is Genly, an envoy from Earth who hopes to persuade the nation of Karhide to join the Ecumen, a league of productive planets. ... Friedman conjures up an engrossing, neo-medieval world where a weaver becomes a whirling dervish spinning into the future, planetary wastes are conveyed by swirling draperies (spectrally lighted by Peter Gottlieb), and all our terrestrial assumptions are intricately subverted. Because much of the action consists of enlightened talk, the Lifeline performances often strive for an import that seems greater than the situation. Though it skirts the edge of camp, the intensity often works, as in Karen Tarjan's wise and charismatic seer Faxe. Adding comic relief, Kevin McCoy exploits the Swiftian possibilities of the pompous and paranoid monarch Argaven. Anchoring the adventure is David Coronado's engaging Genly, an explorer who can look within as well as around him. He keeps a diffuse tale rooted in one man's astonishment, so much so that the love story that becomes the second act engages us as much as the struggles of this undifferentiated planet. Purists may find Lifeline's version different from what they imagined, but that's one more tribute to Le Guin." | ||
* ''The Chicago Sun-Times'' | * ''The Chicago Sun-Times'' | ||
* ''New City'' | * ''New City'' | ||
Revision as of 13:11, 13 January 2011
The Left Hand of Darkness was a 1994-95 theatrical adaptation / production of Ursula K. Le Guin's groundbreaking science fiction novel, The Left Hand of Darkness. Directed and adapted by Meryl Friedman, the novel was adapted for production by Lifeline Theatre, Chicago, Illinois, and produced on their "Mainstage".
- director: Meryl Friedman
- adapted: Meryl Friedman
- set design: Rebecca Hamlin
- actors: David Coronao (Genly Ai), Genevieve Ven Johnson (Estraven), Karen Tarjan (Faxe). Elizabeth Laidlaw.
- other: Elaine Dame
Performances
- November 1994 - January / March 19) 1995, Lifeline Theater, Chicago, Illinois
Reviews, discussions, etc.
- Lawrence Bommer, "Sci-fi Tale Has Chills: Lifeline and Le Guin Build Another World", The Chicago Tribune, Feb. 7, 1995. "Lifeline Theatre's premiere, meticulously adapted by director Meryl Friedman, takes us on an absorbing 180-minute journey through this complex and corrective society. Our guide is Genly, an envoy from Earth who hopes to persuade the nation of Karhide to join the Ecumen, a league of productive planets. ... Friedman conjures up an engrossing, neo-medieval world where a weaver becomes a whirling dervish spinning into the future, planetary wastes are conveyed by swirling draperies (spectrally lighted by Peter Gottlieb), and all our terrestrial assumptions are intricately subverted. Because much of the action consists of enlightened talk, the Lifeline performances often strive for an import that seems greater than the situation. Though it skirts the edge of camp, the intensity often works, as in Karen Tarjan's wise and charismatic seer Faxe. Adding comic relief, Kevin McCoy exploits the Swiftian possibilities of the pompous and paranoid monarch Argaven. Anchoring the adventure is David Coronado's engaging Genly, an explorer who can look within as well as around him. He keeps a diffuse tale rooted in one man's astonishment, so much so that the love story that becomes the second act engages us as much as the struggles of this undifferentiated planet. Purists may find Lifeline's version different from what they imagined, but that's one more tribute to Le Guin."
- The Chicago Sun-Times
- New City
- "In 1994, Lifeline Theater of Chicago made a play out of Ursula Le Guin's science fiction novel, The Left Hand of Darkness, in which all the characters are sex-neutral except when in heat. I sat in the theater, really longing to suspend disbelief. The excellent cast, makeup, and costumes did everything possible to create and maintain the illusion. Yet as each character came on stage, I unwillingly but unerringly "sexed" the actor. This interfered with my experience of the play, but I couldn't help it. I'd read that humans are hard-wired to identify another person's sex before any other quality, but now I'd experienced it first-hand. If we can't help making sex distinctions, no wonder our species is so primed for us/them thinking and its bloody outcomes."[1]
References
- ↑ "Feral", "Feminist Spirituality: Do Not Remove this Label: Sex and Spirituality", MatriFocus, Lammas 2003, Vol. 2-4.