Theater Review -- Tom Titus
Two burning questions surround the production of “Fortinbras Gets
Drunk” at UC Irvine’s Studio Theater: Whatever possessed playwright
Janusz Glowacki to create such nightmarish twaddle, and what on earth
motivated the university’s drama department to foist it on UCI audiences?
Writing plays based on minor characters from Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”
certainly isn’t an original idea; Tom Stoppard perfected the art decades
ago with “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead.” What Glowacki has
accomplished with this fringe player from the last scene of “Hamlet”
borders on the grotesque.
“Fortinbras Gets Drunk” is absurdist farce carried to the point of no
return in director Scott Werve’s ambitious but fatally flawed
interpretation. Werve places the action in a half-dozen different staging
areas on all sides of the audience, with several scenes unfolding
simultaneously. It’s up to the playgoer to determine the area of focus.
Werve also attempts to employ an interactive staging device -- buttons
are placed on rails throughout the audience, and playgoers are encourages
to press their buttons to alter the course of the story. Judging by what
transpires onstage, these buttons are being pushed constantly.
The only button this show really pushes is the audience’s level of
toleration. A good share of the playgoers escaped at intermission, with
most of the rest probably wishing they dared do the same, but figuring
“this has to get better.” No, not necessarily.
Despite all the hallucinogenic nonsense all around him, Glenn Kalison
manages to forge a mighty performance as the tippling title character,
the prince of Norway who is soon to succeed Claudius on Denmark’s throne
-- if malevolent forces don’t eliminate him first. When it came to
carnage, the bloodthirsty Danes apparently had nothing on the Norwegians.
Amanda Schmieder ravenously attacks her evil, scheming character known
as Eight Eyes, although we’re well into the play before we realize who,
in fact, she is. Andrea Troilo is deliciously effective as Dagny Borg, a
Norwegian seductress, and Jeff Takacs registers a high-voltage
performance as Sternborg, scourge of Norway’s crafty plotters.
A few characters from “Hamlet” make waves in “Fortinbras.” The Danish
prince himself, powder flying off his wig, is given a robust, sinewy
portrayal by Nathan LL Makaryk, Jeff Farkash is a devious Polonius, and
Milt Tarver does strong double duty as the ghosts of both Hamlet’s and
Fortinbras’ fathers.
The most creative element of the show is Samantha White’s costuming --
a melange of kitchen utensils and souvenirs from the garbage bin.
Fortinbras’ armor consists of hundreds of beer bottle caps, while the
king of Norway is represented by an overflowing trash can and Finland’s
ruler by a sculpture of playing cards.
Following the show’s model of enforced unconventionality, black-clad
stagehands emerge frequently to furnish required props or costume
changes. There’s even a huge stuffed moose on hand, watching stoically
over the proceedings -- until the second act, when he wisely turns his
back on the action.
See “Fortinbras Gets Drunk” at the risk to your own mental health. Had
Shakespeare witnessed what Glowacki has done with the characters he
created, it most likely would have driven him to drink.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* What: “Fortinbras Gets Drunk”
* Where: UC Irvine Studio Theater, UCI campus, corner of Campus and
University drives
* When: Closing performances 8 p.m. today and Friday, 2 and 8 p.m.
Saturday
* Cost: $9
* Call: (949) 824-2787
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.