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RHINOCEROS
LOCATION: Leob Experimental Theatre
DATES: Dec. 9- Dec. 17
DIRECTOR: Jess R. Burkle ’06
PRODUCER: Ivona Josipovic ’06
Gesturing wildly in the air, a logician concludes that Socrates was in
fact a cat while a townsperson-turned-rhinoceros roams the village. The
Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) production of absurdist
playwright Eugène Ionesco’s “Rhinoceros” shines when presenting such
over-the-top antics; but true victory lies in its profound and stirring
interpretation of the work’s dark underlying themes.
On its surface, “Rhinoceros” deals with the humorously
inexplicable transformation of the inhabitants of a quiet French
village into rhinoceri, an epidemic that consumes everyone but the
protagonist, Berenger (Eric D. Lang ’09).
These metamorphoses are actually a disturbing representation
of the spread of fascism. At first, the village is shocked by the
transformations, but as more and more people decide to join the
movement, it gains unstoppable momentum; as one character explains, “We
must move with the times.”
The father of the Theater of the Absurd, Ionesco is hardly
writing of angst-ridden and fantastic Kafkaesque metamorphoses—in fact,
quite the contrary is true. By the end of the play, it is the single
remaining human form that seems grotesque in comparison with the
peaceful and contented converts.
Director Jess R. Burkle ’06 successfully conveys the strange
ethereal appeal of “rhinoceritis” with deceptively uncomplicated
set-ups. In a brilliant artistic decision, no attempt is made to create
the ungainly rhinoceros costumes that have weakened past renditions;
instead, each newly transformed villager simply opens a red umbrella.
It is a quiet, visually appealing, and deeply unsettling representation
of the villagers’ transformations.
The unconventional use of the umbrellas injects a layer of
inventive visual interpretation into the entire production. While holed
up in his room, Berenger receives a threatening phone call from the
rhinoceroses—there is no sound, but the audience watches with
trepidation as he frantically unscrews the receiver to reveal a
miniature red umbrella within the phone. In the chilling final set,
hundreds of umbrellas, motionless and silent, provide an unsettling
backdrop for Berenger’s anguished cries.
However, the director does not go without missteps. Two
characters inexplicably speak only in French, and two others are
perpetually written to be on cell phones. Yet these minor flaws are
easily overlooked.
The stage of the Loeb Experimental Theatre space is well used,
as the director stages different settings in different areas of the
theater to avoid the time-consuming onstage set changes, for which the
play is often criticized. Stark, clean lighting reemphasizes the
harshness of the graphic all-white sets. The set design, also by
Burkle, is so strikingly minimalist that the walls seem like blank
canvases. In fact, when Berenger’s friend Jean (Michael B. Hoagland
’07) throws up during his sickness, the green vomit becomes art as it
drips down the wall in abstract expressionistic splendor.
The characters themselves become part of the sets. Indeed, the
end of the play finds Berenger crouching terrified under his table, but
his tormented final protest and last line are not shouted until half
the audience has already left the theatre.
The supporting characters are excellent, most notably Noah A.
Rosenblum ’08 in his frenzied and hilariously unpredictable portrayal
of the eccentric logician. Hoagland gives a stunningly versatile
performance; he affectedly twirls his umbrella and skips a few dance
steps as the pompous Jean, but during his transformation into a
rhinoceros, he paces and bellows with a vigorous pent-up power.
Lang, however, is less successful as Berenger. He captures
the naiveté and uncertainty of his character in the play’s early
scenes, but as the supporting characters begin dropping away as a part
of the storyline, his performance becomes tiresome because of his whiny
voice affectation. In particular, the third act, which takes place in
his apartment, drags on, unaided by a bland performance by Jennifer L.
Brown ’07 as love-interest Daisy. Their relationship is unconvincing at
best.
Yet the brilliance and innovation of the interpretation by
director and set designer Burkle triumphs over the occasionally weak
acting. The haunting red umbrellas take Ioensco’s rhinoceroses beyond
the absurd and into the surreal; the HRDC production transcends a mere
illustration of the script and creates a work of art in its own right.
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