‘Desire Under The Elms’ Comes to Life at Firehouse Theatre this Friday

by | Oct 17, 2017 | PERFORMING ARTS

The set is bare-boned, simple, roughly hewn. Soft white lighting pours over actor Adam Turck’s shoulders. As he balances a rake between his hands, he repeats a string of words over and over, perfecting the New England accent that will carry him through Act One: “fuck you, fuck you.”

Looking around, no one but me is giving Turck’s impassioned performance a second glance. There is an easy camaraderie between the actors and crew within the Firehouse Theatre’s black walls. Raucous laughter, shouting voices are constant. Still, there is an underlying intensity, a dedication that is obvious before the actors have even begun playing their parts.

It all fits. Even this simple rehearsal, the cast’s first run-through of the play, it fits – harmonizing perfectly with Eugene O’Neill’s gritty tale, Desire Under the Elms. The play, written originally in 1924, is a raw masterpiece rooted in love, lust, loathing, madness, and murder.

This is O’Neill’s attempt to adapt elements of Greek tragedy, primarily the myth of Phaedra, to a rural New England setting. These themes are as old as time, but Richmond director Josh Chenard is giving a new twist to his own adaptation.

“I moved this play from the original time period in the 1890s to the Great Depression,” Chenard said. “I felt that the themes were better suited aesthetically speaking for the 1930s.”

The powerful emotions and inspirations behind the story, however, remain the same.

“This is a forbidden love story,” Chenard said. “It pulls from the Greeks and their sense of longing, loss, fear, and desperation that is present in so much of their theater.”

Desire Under the Elms is the story of three brothers living on a remote farm – struggling to survive on the land, but living for the beauty of it. When their father, Ephraim Cabot, comes home with a new, young wife named Abbie, the brothers Peter, Eben, and Simeon plot to keep their inheritance.

“The ancient Greeks had no subtext,” Chenard said. “They said exactly what was on their minds. All these strong emotions are right there on the surface, and O’Neill has written the dialogue with such poetry. There’s something about the way he writes that is so rich, so moving.”

And this raw, aching emotion is thick in the air throughout rehearsal. There is nudity, violence, anger, and love bursting at the seams of this piece, but the most remarkable part of Desire Under the Elms is the chemistry between Eben and Abbie.

Landon Nagel, who plays the tragic Eben, struggles with his attraction to Abbie and his loyalty to the land throughout the play. He plays Eben with an earnestness and sadness that draws you in. Amber Martinez, plays Abbie just as skillfully – she is talented enough to make you loathe her and fear her within the first few minutes of the play.

The emotions on stage move very quickly. Nagel thrashes on stage, screams until his face is red, and in the next moment is just as gentle and unsure. His performance is outstanding — albeit without a doubt is extremely challenging in the intensity of his character.

“Eben is broken, he’s caged,” Nagel said. “Not in a way that he is trapped, but in a sorrowful, very painful way. This is a tragic struggle for happiness for him. He feels like an outsider in his own home, he is tied to his past and the death of his mother. And then comes along Abbie, who is dangerous in her own way.”

Chenard, as a directing method, encourages his actors to channel their own personal experiences with emotions such as desperation and love as they play their roles. His hopes for the audience are similar.

“I want the audience to empathize with these characters and their emotions,” he said. “I want them to think about all the times they’ve fallen in love, then out of love. I want them to feel that pain, heartbreak, and loss in death that the characters experience in the play. So often we see and hear theater, but we rarely feel theater.”

Nagel, a Richmond native, also hopes to help the audience feel the rawness of the play, and attributes the starkness of the performance to Chenard.

“I want them to feel the grief, loss, and hope that Eben feels as they watch him,” Nagel said. “There are so many forceful emotions here. With Josh, we get to make the play about what’s expressive and artful, and see how far we can push the envelope on these emotions. We let go of what it should be and just let it be what it is.”

Jane Mattingly, the dramaturg of Desire Under the Elms, also emphasized the connections she anticipates the audience will make with the play, soon to be open to all audiences.

“This story is special in its timelessness,” she said. “Home, family, lonesomeness, desperation – it’s all familiar. You go to {the} theater to feel connected to things, and to the characters on stage. That’s what this is all about.”

Preview of Desire Under the Elms takes place this Fri., Oct. 20, and runs through Sun., Nov. 5.  Tickets range from $15-$35 and can be purchased here

 

Nidhi Sharma

Nidhi Sharma




more in art

The Strange Afterlife of Virginia’s President Heads

Editor's Note: Reminder, the sculptures are located on private property and are not open for general visitation. Access is available only through scheduled guided tours, with Labor Day weekend currently expected to be the final tour on the calendar. Tour information...

Review | ‘As You Like It’ is Just How I Like It

If you’ve been reading these reviews for a while, you’ll notice I love me some context. Especially surrounding William Shakespeare’s plays. One of my favorite things about the existence of Richmond Shakespeare is that they’ve forced me to go back to the English Lit...

IllumiNATION Tells America’s Story on a Monumental Scale

Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation. It's hard to impress people with just a building. Yet standing in front of the...

Blöthar: “GWAR Didn’t Change. The World Freakin Changed.”

Richmond metal band GWAR says the Secret Service contacted the group following a recent performance at the Vans Warped Tour in Washington, D.C., that featured the mock execution of a Donald Trump effigy. Video of the performance, which showed band members...

Review | ‘Come From Away’ is the Best We’ve Ever Been

Do you remember the rollerblading guy with the American flag kit on September 12th? We will never forget the 11th for the horrors, but do you remember the 12th? The 13th? If you do, I don’t even have to say which year. If you don’t, let me tell you a little bit about...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

Review | ‘I Love You Because’ Is Pure Joy 🏳️‍🌈

It could be said that Shakespeare invented the rom-com. It could also be said that Jane Austen improved it a couple of centuries later. Between the two of them, meet-cutes, notices of love or rejection arriving at exactly the wrong time, and breathless affirmations of...

Stay Hungry pt. 1 | Band on the Road

Editor's Note: Writer's Block is a space for Virginia writers to share personal essays, fiction, memoir, and works that fall somewhere in between. In Stay Hungry, Richmond local Eric Kalata looks back on a cross-country tour and the restless optimism of...