 The Seagull
by Anton Chekhov
(adapted by Daniel Minsky)
March 10th - 27th, 1999
The Lab,
8 Britain St.
Chekhov's bird flies to Hollywood!
In
this contemporary adaptation of the Russian master's classic, John
Treplov is a love struck writer who battles his way through a world
deeply rooted in its pretentious standards. Leading and creating those
standards in this archetypal 1950's Hollywood society is John's
notorious and temperamental mother, the famous screen actress, Kathleen
Belmont. Kathleen and her entourage of wealthy Sunset Boulevard doctors,
lawyers, intellectuals and lovers laugh and drink their way through the
summer months at her brother's Malibu beach house.
A story
about the easiness of forgetting, this Hollywood backdrop may be the
perfect place to view these caricatures wander around aimlessly, losing
themselves in the lies and deceit that make up their transposed
Chekhovian world. The only hope they may have of catching a glimpse of
what they've lost may lie in an old dead seagull - a symbol of other
times, of purer purpose, and of course, the stuff that dreams are made
of... |