Arena Stage offers a powerful ‘View’
Article History
There are updates to this article.
Delaney Williams is Eddie and Virginia Kull is Catherine in Arthur Miller’s “A View from the Bridge.” – Arena Stage

Delaney Williams is Eddie and Virginia Kull is Catherine in Arthur Miller’s “A View from the Bridge.” – Arena Stage

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Arthur Miller’s “A View from the Bridge,” playing at Arena Stage, is a Miller classic: On the surface, it deals with modern issues, while in fact exploring age-old, mythic themes.

Set in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, “View” centers around several complicated relationships. The first is between a bull-headed Italian-American longshoreman, Eddie Carbone, and his 17-year-old orphaned niece, Catherine. She has been raised by Eddie and his wife, Beatrice. It quickly becomes apparent that Eddie’s feelings for Catherine are more than paternal.

Soon Beatrice’s cousins Marco and Rodolpho come from Italy illegally and live with the Carbones. At first the young men are welcomed, but the welcome turns sour as Rodolpho and Catherine grow close, which infuriates Eddie. In the end, Eddie confronts his inappropriate feelings for Catharine, but not before his jealousy has led him to turn over the illegal immigrants to the authorities.

In this production, David Agranov is excellent as the carefree Rodolpho, whose spirited desire to enjoy life is a perfect contradiction to Eddie’s heavy-handed, controlling manner. As Eddie, Delaney Williams’ dialect meanders a bit away from Brooklyn, but he captures the longshoreman’s headstrong, self-destructive spirit.

Virginia Kull plays Catherine at a slightly higher than necessary pitch and speed, but she neatly displays the contradictions of Catherine’s heart. Naomi Jacobson is forceful as Eddie’s frustrated and unappreciated wife, as is Louis Cancelmi as Marco.  As Mr. Lipari, J. Fred Shiffman coolly provides an unflappable contrast to the Carbones.

Director Daniel Aukin has done a fine job of creating the atmosphere in which these combustible characters group together, only to have their relationships explode violently. Loy Arcenas’ set is a clever combination of indoor/outdoor spaces, the dock area suggested by a cinder block background off to one side, the Carbone dining room dominating the rest of the stage.

Nancy Schertler’s effective lighting design extends the stage to create unexpected performance spaces. Michael Keck’s pulsing music underscores the profundity of Miller’s drama, which begins with the story of a simple, hard-working man and ends with a thorough examination of jealousy, suspicion, honor and betrayal.


Name
Comments

characters left


Comments from Examiner Readers

7:47 AM MST on Sun., May. 25, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Examiner Reader said:
The fact that the reviewer misspelled the title of the play doesn't change the fact that this was a difficult production to sit through. Give the director kudos for trying something different, but it really did not work.

2 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

9:07 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Former Examiner Reader said:
My wife and I saw Cymbeline this past weekend and really enjoyed it.

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
10:02 PM MST on Thu., Apr. 24, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

theatergoer in DC said:
Wow. I saw Cymbeline last week and wouldn't have recognized it from this review. It's always a pity when theater reviewers haven't the attention span to follow, say, theater. You know Cymbeline is Shakespeare from the start of the first act -- who else so perfectly weaves exiled lovers, mistaken identities, and of course, murder and poison -- and far from another staid production enjoyed only by closed-minded fuddy-duddies, I thought the dog and pony production took what admittedly isn't Shakespeare's best work and jazzed it up -- it was a funny and high-energy performance when I was there, and instead of spacing out at a stiff production with overdramatized lines, I was - forbid! - engaged with the storyline and the characters throughout. I hope this review doesn't keep anyone away -- it's definitely not a traditional staging of a Shakespeare play, but given the production I saw, I think that was a selling point.

4 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
1:54 PM MST on Wed., Apr. 23, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Examiner Reader said:
Yeah, it's hard to take seriously a critic who can't even be bothered to look at his program to confirm the spelling of the title of the play. And Shakespeare, no less! No reader in their right mind should voluntarily subject themselves to such shoddy "journalism."

5 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
1:46 PM MST on Wed., Apr. 23, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Examiner Reader said:
Wow...he mispelled it 4 times...if he can't spell, how can he be taken seriously?

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
1:37 PM MST on Wed., Apr. 23, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Examiner Reader said:
Wow...I haven't seen this show yet, but have serious doubts about the review when the critic cannot spell the name of the play correctly. Hey! Doug Krentzlin! The play is called Cymbeline! With an E in the middle! Let as many people post on this as possible!

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
6:02 AM MST on Wed., Apr. 23, 2008 re: "‘Cymbaline’ crashes"

Examiner Reader said:
The play is actually spelled...Cymbeline...there is no A (assuming we're talking about the one Shakespeare wrote)

4 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
 
 

(page generated in 0.11 seconds)