The Night of the
Iguana
La Femme Theatre
Productions
The Pershing Square
Signature Center
December 30, 2023
Photo courtesy of
La Femme Theatre Productions
The La Femme Theatre
Productions’ presentation of Tennessee Williams’ The Night of the Iguana is riveting.
Director Emily Mann has gathered a stellar cast and masterfully guided
them through Mr. Williams’ poetic writing.
The characters are viscerally portrayed, desperately in need, and
grasping at whatever life-line they can find.
Set design by Beowulf Boritt and lighting design by Jeff Croiter create
a sultry atmosphere for this deeply complex journey.
Reverend T. Lawrence Shannon (played by Tim Daly) is guiding a bus tour of women from a Texan Christian University through Mexico. He takes a detour to Hotel Costa Verde, looking for his friend Fred. Upon his arrival, Fred’s wife, Maxine (played by Daphne Rubin-Vega) informs him that Fred recently died. Maxine immediately sees that Shannon is having a break down, something she nursed him through in the past. He was asked to leave his position in the church after preaching an inappropriate sermon and having relations with an under-aged member of his congregation. Shannon is repeating this pattern of behavior on his bus tour. Judith Fellows (played by Lea DeLaria) is bringing him up on statutory rape charges after he spent the night with Charlotte Goodall (played by Carmen Berkeley), an under-aged member of the bus tour who she is chaperoning. While trying to convince the tour patrons to stay at Hotel Costa Verde instead of the more modern downtown hotel, Hannah Jelkes (played by understudy Dee Pelletier) arrives with her grandfather, Jonathan Coffin (played by Austin Pendleton). Shannon takes Hannah’s side and convinces Maxine to give them a room, even though they are short on funds. As Shannon’s anxiety reaches a breaking point, Hannah is the one who leads him to redemption.
Daphne Rubin-Vega & Tim Daly Photo courtesy of La Femme Theatre Productions |
aggressively motivated by hurt and damage. He is a victim of his own self-indulgence, running from the cause of his pain and allowing the symptoms to rule his behavior. Dee Pelletier (understudy) is grounded as Hannah. She and Mr. Daly have a truthful connection, which allows to story line to build to a stunning conclusion. Ms. Pelletier skillfully delivers genuine moments in the final scene that allow Mr. Daly’s character to open, calm, and make a choice.
Daphne Rubin-Vega is sensual and tempestuous as Maxine. Her jealousy over the attention Shannon gives to Hannah is palpable. She is a powerful adversary to Ms. Pelletier’s Hannah. There are also strong performance by Lea DeLaria, Carmen Berkeley, and Austin Pendleton.
The Night of the Iguana is playing at the Pershing Square Signature Center through February 25. This Tennessee Williams classic is rarely revived, and this production is well worth seeing.
Domenick Danza
No comments:
Post a Comment