Sunday, January 26, 2020

Timon of Athens


Timon of Athens
Theatre for a New Audience
Polonsky Shakespeare Center
January 25, 2019

Photo courtesy of Theatre for a New Audience
The Theatre for a New Audience production of Timon of Athens leaves you with a lot to think about.  This lesser known William Shakespeare / Thomas Middleton play has been edited by Emily Burns and Simon Godwin.  It places a clear focus on the value of selflessness and generosity, and makes a strong statement about mankind’s inability to honor and respect it.  Simon Godwin originally directed this production for the Royal Shakespeare Company in December, 2018.  Kathryn Hunter is brilliantly cast as Timon.  A number of actors play numerous roles, creating distinctive characters and building a strong through line of action. 

It is “sometime in the future” in Athens.  Timon (played by Kathryn Hunter) is entertaining a group of friends in her sumptuous home.  She showers them with gifts.  They adore and praise her.  She supports anyone in need and offers opportunity when citizens are down on their luck.  Her generosity is limitless.  When her creditors come to her demanding their due, she finds herself unable to pay.  She turns to her closest friends, who she supported, for assistance.  They refuse her.  As she faces bankruptcy, she invites them to her home for one final banquet.  She serves her guests bowls of blood.  She then sets her home on fire and removes herself from society.  She lives as a hermit, forgotten, resentful, and self-sufficient.  While digging for food, she unearths a chest of gold.  As word spreads of her newfound fortune, her former followers seek her out to renew their companionship. 

Arnie Burton & Kathryn Hunter
Photo courtesy of Theatre for a New Audience
Kathryn Hunter fills the stage as Timon, mesmerizing the audience and taking them along on her transformative journey.  The opulence, bounty, and light-hearted humor in the beginning of the play crumbles as the truth of Timon’s finances is revealed.  The atmosphere turns threatening and camaraderie dissolves.  It is a stunning portrayal of the unraveling of a society that places its primary value on monetary gain.  The second half of the production shifts as Timon becomes filled with resentment.  Ms. Hunter gallantly portrays this transformation with dexterity.  The sacrifices she makes of her newfound fortune shows that her heart is still intact, even though she has lost her faith in her fellow man. 

Photo courtesy of Theatre for a New Audience
Praises to Theatre for a New Audience for mounting this production.  Simon Godwin has masterfully brought this Shakespeare/Middleton work to a new, relevant light.  The cast is magnificent.  Timon of Athens runs downtown Brooklyn at the Polonsky Shakespeare Center through February 9.

Domenick Danza

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