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BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Few plays make you ponder the laws of thermodynamics, but then again, “Life X3 (Les Trois Versions de la Vie)” by Yasmina Reza, with its scrolling images of galaxies and nebulas projected upon the walls, does seem a tad otherworldly.
“Life X3” is a play in three acts, each one revisiting the same material but in slightly different ways — like in three parallel universes. The story revolves around Henry (Vic Cheswick), a down-on-his-luck scientist and sometimes bipolar (sometimes not, it depends on the act) who wants to curry favor with an esteemed colleague, the pretentious in name and in manner Hubert Finnedori (Mike Ware) and their respective wives, Sonia (Shannon Miller) and Inez (Adele Russell).
Reza, a Parisian playwright, has a reputation for cleverly depicting people’s furies and frailties, and many are on display here, as couples squabble over issues as minute as stocking runs and Cheez-Its and as vast as “the flatness of galaxy halos” and one man’s personal doom.
The dialogue sparkles and bites, with lines that make the audience think: “Never ask a favor of someone who does nothing — they never have the time”; “When a woman says a man is arrogant, she means attractive”; and how “a seemingly empty moment” like walking by a river “can engulf your whole being.”
Each actor’s character changes slightly from scene to scene; while Henry is so obsequious in the first act that he implores, “Do I crawl?” while half bent over, he shows more backbone in the third act, refusing to panic when he learns his work of three years has been trumped by a competitor.
Sonia and Inez play a brittle harpy and a scatter-brained lush with varying softness and hardness of tones in each scene, while Hubert’s pedantic, arrogant uber-intellect maintains its resonance throughout. Perhaps the lesson here is that some people never change no matter the universe in which they exist.
But back to thermodynamics, the second law of which concerns entropy, the chaos within a closed system, like the universe — or a relationship. There’s a big bang, the universe explodes into its near infinite expanse, and then it slowly closes back upon itself again, where the whole cycle will begin again. And in this play, there’s a big bang, a man faces career suicide, a woman contemplates adultery and all collapses to begin again in the next act, as an unseen child, Sonia and Henry’s Arnaud (Peggy Friedman), wails offstage, perhaps for chocolate fingers, for hugs or as a metaphor for the absurd tale of woe that is these people’s lives.
IF YOU GO
“Life X3”
» Venue: The Fells Point Corner Theater, 251 S. Ann St., Fells Point, Baltimore
» Times: 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday
» Tickets: $15; $12 for seniors and students
» Info: 410-276-8737, fpct.org
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Comments from Examiner Readers
8:36 PM MST on Thu., May. 15, 2008 re: "Theater: Hillbarn closes season with Elton John’s ‘Aida’"
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6:07 PM MST on Fri., Apr. 18, 2008
re: "Review: ‘Inspector’ is sadly clueless"
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8:00 PM MST on Thu., Apr. 17, 2008
re: "Review: 'High School Musical' sticks to the status quo"
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10:40 AM MST on Sat., Oct. 6, 2007
re: "Review: 'Heartbreak' at Berkeley Rep"
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12:15 PM MST on Sun., Sep. 9, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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5:18 AM MST on Sat., Sep. 8, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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2:23 PM MST on Mon., Aug. 20, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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11:14 PM MST on Fri., Jul. 6, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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9:27 PM MST on Fri., Jul. 6, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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9:09 PM MST on Fri., Jul. 6, 2007
re: "A ‘Macbeth’ in the Macbuff"
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6:47 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 20, 2007
re: "Eye of the beholder at the heart of ‘Fat Pig”"
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2:03 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 13, 2007
re: "A trifle of a ‘Tempest’"
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10:45 AM MST on Wed., May. 30, 2007
re: "A harrowing choice at Theater J"
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9:33 PM MST on Mon., Apr. 23, 2007
re: "Shakespeare’s bloodiest"
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9:27 PM MST on Mon., Apr. 23, 2007
re: "Shaking up Shakespeare"
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9:23 PM MST on Mon., Apr. 23, 2007
re: "Shaking up Shakespeare"
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Examiner Reader said:
I thought it was a great production and both Alexa Ortega and Adam Barry were absolutely fantastic.
9 agree | 5 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The Government Inspector: Quite poorly done. Actors unprepared. Line delivery mishaps. Overpriced. Prop failure at the end. It reminded me of sequels such as Oceans v11 - v13, where a group of well known actors use their names to draw a crowd and sell tickets. Uk. The result is a mediocre performance, in part because of too many cooks -- and some of these cooks, e.g. Geoff Hoyle are really good. Hopefully this review will save someone else the time and money.
8 agree | 5 disagree
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Parkside Poulegene said:
Re: High School Musical I just took my daughter Sharmuta to this show and we had to leave early! When we got home I took away all her "High School Musical" CD's and tee-shirts. If she even mentions the show again she's grounded for a month, and that goes for her other mother too. This show is really racist, homophobic and pro-Zionist and pro-Bush-Terror. There's too many white people in it. This show needs to be shut down and outlawed.
8 agree | 6 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Thank you for the first honest review that I have read on this production. The length of Act two was tortuous to sit through.
381 agree | 325 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I bet the scene where Macbeth and Macduff are branishing their CLAYMORES is a hoot!
295 agree | 309 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Playing naked? Not really - the main character's body is covered by fur! As the reader before wrote the actor playing Macbeth is extremely hairy. It is quite strange to see how hairy a mans body can be... His body hair was the most impressing thing of the whole play.
320 agree | 289 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Bloody, Bold, Resolute, and Naked - AND HAIRY!!! I read an article that all actors were not allowed to shave any body hair three months before the play started to look "naturally". So it is impressive how hairy the actor playing Macbeth is - he has a furry chest and even a quite hairy back and bushy pubic hairs. It is very unusual today to see such a hairy actor fully nude, because normally an actor shaves at least his back hairs doing a nude scene on stage or in a movie... So big compliments to Daniel Eichner for presenting us his great furry body fully nude!
348 agree | 303 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Good review... one of the few critics able to articulate some of the problems with this show. I left at intermission and the lighting was troublesome. sometimes I wonder what the other critics are thinking --- if you are still curious fgo on Saturday afternoons when the tickets are "pay what you can."
382 agree | 341 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Munch claims "there is no denying" that the nudity in WSC's "Macbeth" "does little to enhance or elevate Shakespeare’s Scottish play." Well, the critics at www.PotomacStages.com and www.DCTheatreScene.com have taken the opposite view. Potomac Stages, in fact, wrote: "in no uncertain terms that this is a quality production that presents "the Scottish play" in a new and very effective light (or is that a new and very effective darkness?)." DC Theatre Scene wrote: "The actors’ nudity provides an extra dimension to their presentations...By being physically naked, these actors become emotionally naked as well. This production of Macbeth is a great gift to those who have the will to receive it. We are unlikely to see anything like it in the foreseeable future." So it seems the only thing there is no denying is that Munch doesn't speak for everyone.
399 agree | 309 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Tonight's performance of "Macbeth" started at 8:05 pm and was done precisely at 10:30. I'm not the best at math, but that seems like under 2 and half hours...not over 3 hours, which the critic claims the play to be.
387 agree | 350 disagree
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JaimeK said:
Shame Fat Pig wasn't given an actual review on the acting. There were some pretty phenomenal performances. Especially Erin Riley as Helen and Courtney Ryan as Jeannie. Very VERY good show.
512 agree | 401 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Closes in 4 days
445 agree | 396 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Why review it a few days before it closes and not mention its closing in the review?
435 agree | 426 disagree
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EdnBetty said:
We just returned from Titus Andronicus, the play that Kenneth Tynan called "the worst play Marlowe ever wrote". We expected gore and got it! Tsoutsouvas was also great, but Valerie Leonard was vamping it over the top. And that voice set my teeth on edge!
740 agree | 476 disagree
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Reader said:
Yes, "She Stoops to Comedy" at Woolly Mammoth is a treat!
540 agree | 460 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Oh, we just a-DORed this show!
567 agree | 452 disagree
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