Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Ended: 
July 20, 2019
Country: 
USA
State: 
Illinois
City: 
Chicago
Company/Producers: 
Victory Gardens Theater
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Biograph
Theater Address: 
2433 North Lincoln Avenue
Phone: 
773-871-3000
Website: 
victorygardens.org
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Ariel Dorfman
Director: 
Chay Yew
Review: 

The allegorical theme often found in medieval art lending our play its title shares its cognomen with a string quartet by classical composer Franz Schubert, the latter a favorite of the "doctor" who assisted in rape and torture of political prisoners during a recent occupation by military insurgents. Fifteen years later, with democracy restored, Geraldo Escobar, newly appointed to serve on the committee investigating the previous regime's crimes-against-humanity, brings home a guest one evening—only to see his wife succumb to long-buried memories triggered by the stranger's personal idiosyncrasies.

Audiences in 2014 are unlikely to dwell on Paulina Escobar's injuries—atrocities (those safely perpetrated by foreign governments, anyway) are fodder for dinner-table conversation nowadays. Nor are playgoers inclined to doubt that Roberto Miranda was the one who inflicted them—what enlightened American would dispute a victim's account of her abuse?

The questions of whether Paulina has earned the right to execute her tormentor and whether this circumvention of due legal process echoes the very injustices Geraldo's tribunal was created to address are, likewise, less important, twenty years after Ariel Dorfman first raised it, as that of just what can reunify a society whose citizens still fester under hostile mistrust of their neighbors.

This is why, despite a scenario proposing a (perhaps) innocent man held captive by a gun-brandishing PTSD-crazed avenging angel, it's a mistake to view this play as a standard-issue thriller—especially since an epilogue suggests that its events may be occurring solely within Paulina's mind as she prepares to assume the role that her husband's office will demand of her. Director Chay Yew understands this, deliberately muting the text's sensational aspects to highlight the issues, public and domestic, relevant to deciding the outcome of the seemingly unresolvable stand-off.

He also understands that three people talking for 100 intermissionless minutes can swiftly grow visually and aurally fatiguing. William Boles's revolving beach house, allowing conversations to be conducted both indoors and out, introduces movement to the stage picture, as does Mikhail Fiksel's immersive soundscape, but it's the attention to subtext that Sandra Oh and John Judd exhibit that generates the necessary tension between Paulina and Roberto. (Raul Castillo's Geraldo, except when the plot requires a show of anger, comes off as curiously apathetic, perhaps reflecting Paulina's subjective perception of her spouse.)

You may—or may not—go home contemplating the heavy burden of forging peace among the world's warring factions, but you won't find a more articulate presentation of the arguments than in this skillfully forged production.

Miscellaneous: 
This review was first published in Windy City Times, 7/14.
Critic: 
Mary Shen Barnidge
Date Reviewed: 
July 2014