Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
August 29, 2019
Ended: 
September 29, 2019
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Geffen Playhouse
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Geffen Playhouse
Theater Address: 
10886 Le Conte Avenue
Phone: 
310-208-5454
Website: 
geffenplayhouse.org
Running Time: 
90 min
Genre: 
Dark Comedy
Author: 
Jen Silverman adapting William Rowley, Thomas Dekker, and John Ford's The Witch of Edmonton
Director: 
Marti Lyons
Review: 

Jen Silverman pretty much savages the modern world in Witch, her fiendishly clever adaptation of a Jacobean drama, The Witch of Edmonton, now running at the Geffen.

Mixing modern slang with period talk, Silverman depicts mankind as grasping, greedy and duplicitous, except for the village witch, Elizabeth Sawyer (the gritty Maura Tierney), who is the only one in the village with any common decency.  A feminist icon in Silverman’s hands, she sees right through male pretense, patriarchy and chauvinism…and even rejects the blandishments of the devil when he comes on to her.  Called Scratch (Evan Jonigkeit), this “junior” devil turns up in Edmonton like a traveling salesman,  offering Faustian bargains to one and all:  he’ll do your bidding---make you rich, kill your enemies, etc.---in return for your soul.  In Elizabeth’s case, he is so smitten with her that he eventually goes against company rules.  He’ll give her love… with nothing expected in return.  Tempted as she is, Elizabeth turns him down:  she simply can’t believe in men’s words—or even in hope itself.

All of this unfolds on Dane Laffrey’s  ingenious  two-level set, the lower part of which serves as the common areas of Edmonton, a field, a tavern, etc.  On the top part, serving as the castle, a food and drink-laden banquet table slides in and out.  This is where the royals romp, under the forbidding gaze of two painted eyes (female, of course; it’s a Jen Silverman play).

Sir Arthur Banks (Brian George) rules the roost, sounding off pompously about family legacy, power and property.  He also rips into his gay son, Cuddy (Will Von Vogt) for having failed to marry and present him with progeny. Cuddy, who would rather spend his time Morris dancing rather than exploiting peasants and hunting birds, begins to seethe with rage when he realizes that Sir Arthur is thinking of cutting him out of his will and leaving everything to Frank Thorney (Ruy Iskandar), a commoner who has become the old man’s pet.  Cuddy quickly signs a contract with the devil, telling him “you can have my soul if you promise to kill Frank.”

The sixth character in Witch is Winnifred (Vella Lovell), a serving wench with a secret: she is not only married to Frank but carrying his baby.  Poor Winnifred is stunned and appalled when the sleazeball Frank pretends not to know her when Sir Arthur  makes his generous offer.  Even the devil is horrified by such craven human behavior.

Silverman’s bloody, bestial comedy is skillfully acted by the talented cast.  Direction and production values are also top-notch, as is Mikhail Fiksel’s clanging, caustic musical score.

Cast: 
Brian George, Ruy Iskandar, Evan Jonigkeit, Vella Lovell, Maura Tierney, Will Von Vogt
Technical: 
Set: Dane Laffrey; Costumes: Danae Iris McQueen; Lighting: Keith Parham; Sound: Cricket S. Myers; Music: Mikhail Fiksel
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
August 2019