Images: 
Total Rating: 
**1/2
Previews: 
October 23, 2018
Opened: 
November 14, 2018
Ended: 
December 22, 2018
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Classic Stage Company
Theater Type: 
off-Broadway
Theater: 
Classic Stage Company
Theater Address: 
136 East 13th Street
Phone: 
212-352-3101
Website: 
classicstage.org
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Comedy-Drama
Author: 
Bertolt Brecht
Director: 
John Doyle
Review: 

“Every day I read the play. I think I hear the words these words on CNN as I read them on the page… It is fitting that it reminds us of the choices that are available to us in relation to the way the world can go… Classic plays have politics at their heart—you take a play like Richard III or the Scottish Play—they’re warnings. And there’s a warning in Arturo Ui. This is a time for theater to say something; if we’re not screaming and shouting now, when are we ever going to do it?” —John Doyle, Artistic Director of Classic Stage Company.

For those who love the work being done at the Classic Stage Company and Bertolt Brecht, both of which I do, you had better run to see The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, as its curtain goes down on Saturday, December 22, 2018. Written in 1941, when Brecht was living in exile in Helsinki, Finland, just before he decamped to Hollywood, the play chronicles the rise of Arturo Ui a fictional 1930s Capone-like Chicago mobster and his ruthless attempts to control the cauliflower market by forcefully selling protection to business owners, ironically from his own men.

A satirical allegory with vaudevillian overtones, clever wordplay, and numerous quotes from Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Richard III, many in verse, Arturo Ui closely follows Hitler’s rise to power in Germany and the advent of the Nationalist Socialist state. Brecht being a Marxist at heart, lightly buried within the plot’s heavy mix of murder and mayhem, is an attack on the evils of capitalism. The most compelling conceit of this play is that all of its characters, events, groups, and locations, with Arturo Ui (Raúl Esparza) representing Hitler, have direct counterparts in real life. However, if you don’t know the history of pre-World War II Germany like the back of your hand, it is not easy to identify, other than Esparza’s Hitler, which actor is representing Joseph Goebbels (Propaganda Minister), Hermann Göring, Ernest Rohm (Commander of SA, the Nazi’s party militia), Paul von Hindenburg (President of the Weimar Republic), and Engelbert Dollfuss, the assassinated Chancellor of Austria.

Though the audience could access the play’s program using their smart phone to read what is what and who is who (which few people seemed to be doing) no playbill was handed out to the theater’s patrons. A barrage of complaints about this, among both the audience and attending critics, entered my highly attuned ear, before the play started, and after it ended. Hopefully this is a one-off deal, and the Classic Stage Company will rethink this unwelcomed practice.

In all fairness, some of this where, what, how, and who confusion is somewhat alleviated by a loudspeaker announcing what historical event, along with the year, had just taken place in Germany. The first of some ten announcements tells us that the year was 1932, there was a worldwide slump, Germany was hit hard, and that the Prussian landowners were angling for a government subsidy. The last two announcements inform us that in 1938 the Nazi’s invaded Austria and that 98% of the terrorized electorate voted yes for Hitler becoming the supreme commander. All ten Brechtian flavored scenes, fraught with lying, deceit, arson, theft, and murder, and more than a dollop of cleverly sharpened humor tossed about by many of the play’s characters, begins to unfold after each broadcast.

While the city of Chicago representing Berlin is a no brainer, even for the novice, identifying the other locations is more difficult. For the record, in this play Cicero is Austria, the burning Warehouse is the Reichstag, and the Trust, which initially one is led to believe has all of the power, are the Prussian nobility who owned the great estates that were maintained and worked by peasants. Not that any of the above is absolutely necessary to know in order to enjoy the play, as we do recognize the actions of each character, and a city is a city.

Of course, this “distancing effect” is exactly Brecht’s intention, as the playwright was far was less interested in the audience actually identifying emotionally with the characters, or even the play’s location, which theoretically could be anyone and anywhere. What he most wanted was the audience to recognize the social injustice and exploitation happening right in front of them and to be moved enough to go forth from the theater and effect change in the world outside.

Interestingly enough, this is exactly what TV newscaster Howard Beale (currently being channeled to a Tony-smelling fare thee well by Brian Cranston in the Broadway production of Network) wants when he urges his viewers to lean out their windows and yell, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore.” If that is not sufficient enough to raise ones hackles, the Network patrons are instructed, a number of times during the play, to shout this same saying out loud, leaving no doubt in anybody’s mind that Trump and his continuously changing circle of appointees were its main targets.

As with many of the today’s plays, whether classical, contemporary, comedy or drama, the “elephant in the room” lurking about, not unlike his creepy behavior during his debates with Hillary Clinton, is the Ghost of Trump. One cannot sit through Arturo Ui without thinking about the rise of Trump and the politically divisive world we live in. Towards the end of the play, Doyle, gilding the lily, links the past to our present by bombarding the audience with the sound of crowds shouting “Sieg Heil” “Sieg Heil”, over and over again. Quite unexpectedly these shouts morphs into Trump supporters chanting “Lock Her Up!, Lock Her Up!, Lock Her Up.”

Though The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui is considered to be one of Brecht’s lesser plays, it is a lot better than most theatrical opinion-makers think. After reading the script, I have come to the conclusion that it is a work of genius, by a genius. That it is rarely performed, and when it is, it is rarely appreciated, is that it takes a director of genius, and a technical crew to match, who could go neck to neck, brain to brain, with Brecht to make it work. It would be interesting to see what Ivo Van Hove (Network, The Crucible, Lazarus)>O? and his equally inventive, long-time theater partner, scenic & lighting designer Jan Versweyveld, would make of it. Going further back, an Orson Welles, another force to be reckoned with, might also have done the trick.

The last Brecht play I saw was also at Classic Stage Company. If memory serves me, the show, also directed by John Doyle in 2010, was simply wonderful all the way around. The acting, the direction, the set, the lighting and costumes, was all of one piece. Not so with CSC’s current Arturo Ui. The big spoiler is the set which places the play’s eight actors, often in complete darkness, behind an industrial steel fence in the rear of the space where they wait until needed to come to the stage. These excessive comings and goings, and the clanging metal gate, as the actors enter and exit, quickly grow tiresome. While Ann Hould-Ward’s casual, dress-down costuming is nearly letter perfect, Jane Cox’s extremely low lighting, totally erasing the actors from view in some scenes, does nobody, audience and actors alike, any favors.

Strangely, the actor commanding the most attention, and afforded the most stage time (other than Esparza), is Christopher Gurr who as Dogsborough (based on Paul von Hindenburg, the President of Germany during the twenties and thirties). As the well-respected bedrock of Chicago businessmen, the very man to whom Ui first turned for help on his way up the gangster ladder, his character—the only one in the play that realistically takes us under his skin—is the one most interesting to watch. Though I do find it strange that Gurr’s acting, as compelling as it is, is not in the least Brechtian in style.

Other actors, some playing more than one role or doing supporting cameos, people the stage like insects coming and going. As far as Esparza, his portrayal of Ui is less than satisfactory. His quiet moments are bland, and his handling of Ui’s most turbulently moments, which should be bigger than life, perhaps even other worldly, are unbelievable. That is to say his acting is a lot more Esparza than Ui.

Of course, a few scenes allow the actors to burst into flame. The most entertaining, both scary and funny in its truthfulness, takes place right after an announcement from the loudspeaker tells us that it is 1933 and Hindenburg yields to Herr Hitler. It is here that Esparza’s Ui, wanting to change his image to fit his new role as a more powerful boss, gets to flex his comedic muscles. Deciding that he needs to know how to speechify, walk, and sit in order to become the big boss, he asks, “How d’you guys walk around in the theater or the opera?” The assignment to bring him up to snuff quickly falls to a quirky has-been actress, beautifully played by Elizabeth A. Stanley. Adopting the air of a Shakespearian tragedian, she tells Ui that she can teach him, “the grand manner in ten minutes.” And teach him she does. With every bodily movement she suggests—each one crazier than the next—Ui goes from a simple boy from Brooklyn (as he likes to say throughout the play) to a robotic-like creature not far removed from Chaplin’s performance in the 1940 film, “The Great Dictator.” “Hold you head up! Let your toes touch the ground first,” she councils. “You have a natural talent except you don’t know what to do with your hands. It might be best if you place them in front of your genitals” she adds. As far as sitting, Ui is advised to “Put your hand on your thighs, parallel to the stomach, always away from the body.”

Of course, all of this vaudevillian shtick, nicely played out by Esparza, elicits waves of laughter from the audience. When asked by one of his cohorts if he is trying to impress the high-hats in the Trust, Ui answers, “Naturally not, I’m doing it for all them little people…who the hell cares what professors think? Or city-slickers, intellectuals. What counts is what the little hick.” I ask you, does any of this sound familiar?

Cast: 
George Abud (Clark), Eddie Cooper (Roma), Elizabeth A. Davis (Giri), Raúl Esparza (Arturo Ui), Christopher Gurr (Dogsborough) Omoze Idehenre (Mrs. Dullfleet), Mahira Kakkar
Technical: 
Set: John Lee Beatty, Costumes: Anne Hould-Ward Lighting: Jane Cox and Tess James, Sound: Matt Stine
Critic: 
Edward Rubin
Date Reviewed: 
November 2018