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The Sight Unseen Theatre Group is one of my favorite local companies. Their Quarterlife made my “Best of” lists for World Premiere Play, Intimate Theater Play, and Ensemble. A Year Without Spring, directed by Andy Mitton, was another fine world premiere drama, with outstanding performances (particularly by Eric Bloom and Michael Laurino). Then, in a complete turnabout, Sight Unseen put on a musical, Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins, with AYWS director Mitton wearing a much different hat, as musical director, Quarterlife star Clark Freeman in the band, and sets and lighting co-designed by Sam Roberts. Once again, a Sight Unseen production made my “Best of” list, this time for Intimate Theater Musical, Now, Roberts, Freeman, and Mitton have combined forces again for yet another challenge, that of fashioning a 99-seat theater production of Alexandre Dumas’ classic adventure novel The Count of Monte Cristo, adapted for the stage and directed by Roberts.
This Count of Monte Cristo looks great, beginning with Haley Powell’s set design. Sails, like those on the ship Pharon, where young Edmond Dantes was a teenage sailor, fill the upstage wall, on one of which are projected titles in quill-like script as introductions to each “chapter.” The sail motif is carried on throughout the show as "sails" of various shapes and sizes are manipulated by cast members to become (among other things) a pair of adjoining jail cells, a deathbed, a church, etc. Dan Jenkins (better known to me as one of our best set designers) has created a very effective lighting design for this production, and Andy Mitton (once again wearing a new hat) has composed an epic, mood-setting background score. Costumes by A. Jeffrey Schoenberg couldn’t be better, a gorgeous tapestry of 19th century fashion. Jesse Holland has choreographed some exciting sword fights, and choreographer Peter Schmitz merits high marks for his inventive creations: actors becoming a ship rocking at sea, waves carrying Dantes to shore, as well as several opera ballets, which characters watch from “box seats” stage left and stage right.
Clark Freeman makes a dashing Dantes, and there are some very good performances among the large cast. Particularly good are Frank Ashmore as Dumas and a variety of older characters; Brad Grusnick as Danglars, who helps to bring about Dantes’ imprisonment; Jonathan Nail as prosecutor Villefort; two Assassin alums, Philip D’Amore (excellent as the evil Fernand) and Jason Decker (a suave Caderousse); and Melanie Lora, recalling a young Helen Hunt as Mercedes, Dantes’ first and greatest love. Freeman and Lora have a particularly effective scene in Act 2, where Dantes confesses his secrets to Mercedes. There seemed to be opening night jitters among some of the cast members, but these will hopefully disappear in short order.
I must admit to having been confused by the production’s concept. As the lights go up, an actor (playing Alexandre Dumas, I believe) passes out folded sheets of paper to cast members, which appear to be assignments. At first I assumed that (a la Man of La Mancha), the cast was being informed which roles they were supposed to play in a reenactment of Dumas’ novel, however a glance at my program indicated that each was a “scribe.” Were they being assigned sections of the novel to write/narrate to us? Perhaps this was to allow actors to play different roles without having to be concerned with looking like the characters they were portraying. For example, though the novel covers a period of decades, the actors never age. Dantes at one point is supposed to be bearded, but Freeman is not. Characters are not supposed to recognize Dantes, due to his many years in prison, but we see him always as the young and handsome Freeman. Perhaps the play’s concept was to explain away these questions?
One other aspect of the production was problematic for me. Men’s roles were sometimes played by women, but only once, and briefly, near the play’s end, did a male play a female character (in a brief dance sequence). Why stretch the audience’s credibility in this way? Also, while the males in the cast cover a wide range of ages and types, the five women in the cast are all ingénue types, making it harder to see them in the variety of roles they were called upon to play, and harder for me to become fully involved in the story.
These qualifications notwithstanding, Sight Unseen Theatre Group deserves highest marks for its ambitious goals, for the production’s many fine performances, and the elegant and creative design of the Dumas classic. I look forward to seeing what’s up next for this company, which reinvents itself with each new production.
Edgemar Center for the Arts, 2437 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90405; September 21st until October 21st. Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00pm and Sundays at 4:00pm. Reservations and information: (877)9-UNSEEN (986-7336) or online at www.sightunseentheatre.com
--Steven Stanley September 21, 2007
Photos: Ed Krieger
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