Logo
ISSUE #35.27 • PERFORMANCE • REVIEW

Three Sisters (Artists Rep)


Who shot Baron Nikolai Lvovich Tusenbach?

Share: | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 0 comments
Recently in "Performance"

November 25th, 2009
Unholy Nights | Three unconventional holiday shows, in order of depravity.0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Everyone Who Looks Like You (Hand2mouth Theatre) | A rowdy ensemble grows up by going back home.0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Chronos/Kairos (BodyVox) | The local company brushes off dust and celebrates 12 years in the biz.0 comments

October 28th, 2009
Orphée (Portland Opera) | Into the underworld with Philip Glass.0 comments

October 21st, 2009
Hofesh Shechter Company (White Bird) | An Israeli-born dancemaker spars with Portland. 1 comment

October 14th, 2009
Fiction (Portland Playhouse) | Writer’s block got you down? Try adultery!0 comments

October 7th, 2009
Ben Franklin: Unplugged (Portland Center Stage) | Josh Kornbluth has (founding) father issues.0 comments

September 30th, 2009
La Bohème (Portland Opera) | Lush tales from urban Bohemia.0 comments

September 30th, 2009
Ragtime (Portland Center Stage) | A complete work of E.L. Doctorow, abridged.0 comments

September 23rd, 2009
Autumn at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival | Tilting at windbags.0 comments


SISTERS: Luisa Sermol, Andrea Frankle and Maya Villazan.
IMAGE: Owen Carey
BY AARON MESH | amesh at wweek dot com

[May 13th, 2009]

When a theater company commissions a playwright in the flush of his career to adapt a canonical work, it is banking on a bold new interpretation. When that play is Chekhov’s Three Sisters and the writer is Tracy Letts, Tony- and Pulitzer-winner for August: Osage County and a proclaimed admirer of Tennessee Williams, the stage can expect fireworks.

Artists Repertory Theatre scored a coup by enlisting Letts for a world premiere, and it got what it wanted: This Three Sisters starts as a drama about quiet desolation, then takes the quiet behind the barn and shoots it. The production’s sound design, which opens with birdsong, gradually fills with screams, raucous parties, shattering glass and gunfire. Letts has reimagined the bucolic Russian tragedy as a prime-time soap opera. This is Dallas longing for Moscow, with Chekhov’s language pounding like a Siberian tiger on a hot tin roof.

In Letts’ hands, that language has been roughed up, slapped around. The opening monologue from Olga (Andrea Frankle) is now interrupted by a guffaw of “Horseshit!” The climactic wail of baby sister Irina (Amaya Villazan) has been changed from “I am in total despair” to “I am in real pain”—the new wording strips the narcissism naked, revealing a demand for validation, like a Facebook status update. The blunt violence extends to Jon Kretzu’s direction: When Natasha (Marjorie Tatum) upbraids a tired servant (Vana O’Brien), she backhands the old woman across the face.














icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

Tatum’s Natasha is the production’s pint-sized force, the horrible girlfriend of Andrey Prozorov (Todd Van Voris). By Act II, she has become his much more horrible wife, screeching demands across a stage crowded by a grove of trees: a bitch among the birches. Her ascension is a blow to Andrey’s titular siblings (also including Luisa Sermol as Masha), who even at their happiest seem on the verge of hysterical spells. By comparison, the men are lightweights, dithering and weakened by vodka. For worse or (mostly) better, Letts’ Three Sisters is a claws-out catfight, with a hissable villainess pitted against three steel maples she tries to uproot. While its raw cries and whispers won’t tell you anything about Russian social strictures—why are these ladies stuck in this house, again?—the new play can afford to amp the volume on the anguish because it understands the feeling beneath. It is in real pain.

SEE IT: Artists Repertory Theatre, 1515 SW Morrison St., 241-1278. 7:30 pm Wednesdays-Saturdays, 2 and 7:30 pm Sundays, 11 am Wednesdays May 27 and June 3. Closes June 14. $25-$47.

 

Rate This Story
Be the first to rate this story.

 
read all 0 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Three Sisters (Artists Rep)”

 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
December 31st 1969Washington State | The Canada of Oregon has it all—a Stonehenge replica, a longboarder's concrete wet dream and dark, damp underground lava caves. Vive les rocks.
December 31st 1969Oregon's Outer Edges | Crater Lake. Hell's Canyon. Wallowa and Steens mountain ranges. Hell, yeah.
December 31st 1969Central Oregon/High Desert | No rain, plenty of snow, obsidian flows and great local beer. The folks from the real eastside know how to unbend outside.
December 31st 1969Great Cascades/Columbia Gorge | With plenty of room to roam—and hot springs for your weary feet—it's the place to ramble and relax for the weekend.
December 31st 1969Willamette Valley | Monks, tracks, tubing and wine make the fertile strip a virile place to play.
December 31st 1969Stumptown | Tons of public parks, an extinct volcano and nude beach volleyball to keep you jolly. Get out and collect those merit badges, without leaving the city.
December 31st 1969The Coast | The beaches are public. You own them. Go play—hike in the old-growth forests.
December 31st 1969Cycle Tour 101: Your on-bike guide to Highway 101 | To ride the greatest bike route in Oregon, you need to get out of Portland.
December 31st 1969Doggin' It | What happens when a Portland running club jogs with pooches from the pound?
December 31st 1969Over the Edge | Sam Drevo will paddle yr ass.