In the Upcoming 'Shrew,' Love Is for Redder or for Worse
"Taming of the Shrew's" richly red set was designed by Narelle Sissons, who says, "Kate's journey is quite powerful. By the end of the production the set is collaborating with her coming around."
(By Scott Suchman -- Shakespeare Theatre Company)
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Sunday, September 30, 2007
A billboard-size Vargas pinup. Lipstick-red stage. The aesthetic is drop-dead sexy in the early scenes of the Shakespeare Theatre Company's "The Taming of the Shrew," with an accent on conspicuous consumption.
As set designer Narelle Sissons decides where to place three rolling glass display cases, each as big and swanky as a window at Tiffany's, she says: "It's very exciting. Like having lots of toys to play with."
"I think very visually," says director Rebecca Bayla Taichman. "Everything is born in the design."
As a technical rehearsal inches forward at the Lansburgh, while expensive-looking scenic elements are tested and split-second light and sound cues are fine-tuned, one wonders just where the elaborate palette comes from: Taichman or Sissons?
Sissons, monitoring each change from the back row of the darkened theater, says: "I think it's the play. Our ideas are born out of the text, and in this instance, it seemed right to use the technology."
Taichman calls "Shrew" (now in previews; it opens Thursday) a "complicated emotional story," with intimacies compromised by deal-making. "It seemed familiar to me, this obsession with wealth over real human connection. The play is a steely-eyed, sharp-clawed look at that."
"It's a very tricky play for a young woman to do," she says. "I love the play. It pushes my buttons in all these strange ways -- something about its contradictions, its incredible humor and profound darkness that don't have to cancel each other out. There's nothing about it that's comfortable."
To help her find the right imagery, Taichman called on Sissons, the transplanted Brit who designed her arresting production of Sarah Ruhl's "The Clean House" at Woolly Mammoth two years ago. Taichman and Sissons both use terms like "powerful," "high-styled" and "corporate" to describe the opening environment. Even "macho," Sisson says, before taking the word back.
"I don't think this production of Shakespeare's play is anti-male," the designer explains. "It's an interesting debate on male-female social standing. And we have the alpha male and the alpha female coming together working out these issues."
Sissons says the stage's blazing red helps force the heightened performance style that Taichman has in mind. It's pretty rare to apply a color that hot, Sissons says, although she used it in Mabou Mines's recent and unconventional "A Doll's House," in which undersize actors played men dominating tall women. "Not that I specialize in these gender plays," she adds.
"Shrew" is a notoriously thorny "gender play," given its scenes of acidic bickering and controversial obedience. Plot refresher: There are plenty of suitors for the wealthy Baptista's beautiful daughter, Bianca -- but she's off limits until Baptista's elder daughter Kate (played by the formidable actor-playwright Charlayne Woodard) is wed.
Enter Petruchio (the strapping Christopher Innvar, from the STC's "The Beaux' Stratagem" last year), and "Kiss Me, Kate" fans can sing along here: He's "come to wive it wealthily in Padua/If wealthily, then happily in Padua." Dowry in sight, he takes on Kate -- and thus the design focus on this bruising comedy's dark, mercantile heart.