Theater Review: Richard III in New York

Part of: StageMage

In their current production of Richard III, Shakespeare's most over-the-top masterpiece, the Nicu's Spoon company takes the adventurous step of casting a disabled actor in the title role. Henry Holden drags and clanks about the stage using crutches and an artificial leg, diminutive (though not hunchbacked), leather-faced, red-eyed, suitably monstrous but painfully human. Director Heidi Lauren Duke doesn't need to take liberties with the text to show how Richard's evil nature could have come from a lifetime of being shunned for his deformity. And she and Holden make good use of the crutches, the leg, and the actor's entire frame as in-your-face props.

As a Shakespearean actor, Mr. Holden has limitations. He can't (or chooses not to) reconcile his angular New York accent with the rhythms of the text. This becomes a bigger issue in conjunction with the production's other innovation: Holden speaks Richard's lines only when alone on stage. In dialogue, another actor, standing in the corner with a lamp and a book, reads Richard's parts while Holden mimes.

On the strength of his voicings, Andrew Hutcheson, who does the line readings, seems a fine actor, and I would really like to see him in a full-fledged classical theater role. But the contrast between Holden's New York speech patterns and Hutcheson's beautiful enunciation of "standard American" Shakespeare-speak is distracting.

Also, because Hutcheson is so good, the eye is too often drawn to him when it should be focussed on the physical Richard on the stage - but that Richard is mum. The idea is to make Richard's two-faced nature explicit. But in a small box theater, where the audience is practically in the midst of the action, the conceit stumbles. It might work better in a larger theater with a proscenium stage.

In other ways the production makes very good use of the space. Victoria Roxo's set design and Steven Wolf's lighting adeptly turn the floor from throne room into Tower prison into battlefield. There's very little stage furniture - just a small archway and a couple of things to sit on. One of the latter, in synchronicity with the new Transformers movie, changes splendidly from a chair into a stepladder. Their stolid woodenness, along with Richard's crutches and leg, emphasize the pure physicality of the action, which heightens the sense of immediacy in the production's best scenes, many of which occur in the latter half of the play: Richard's crowning; his eerie dream sequence; the powerfully and silently played later murders; and the battle scene and Richard's final comeuppance.

For these and other crucial moments, Sarah Gromko provides an eclectic and effective palette of music, from Renaissance dances to ambient synthesized sounds to punk rock and death metal. This is not one of those modern-dress Shakespeares where people are trying too hard to modernize. Harsh rock music, piercings, leather pants and so forth reflect and enhance the mood of this grim, bloody story.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics. As a writer he contributes most often to the Culture section, where he often reviews NYC theater; he also writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent music releases. …

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