Review: 'The Scarlet Letter' at The Gamm Theatre
By: Randy Rice
It has been said that The Scarlett Letter sealed Nathaniel Hawthorne’s reputation as the preeminent American author. Nearly 160 years after its publication the themes still resonate here in New England. Phyllis Nagy’s adaptation keeps the core of the story and surgically excises what she believes is not needed.
Jeanine Kane gives a proud, stoic, performance as Boston’s Hester Prynne. The character of Prynne, who is convicted for the crime of adultery, is a work of fiction. It is, of course, true that a woman (or man) who did not live their life by strict, puritanical, values of the time would be ostracized or, in the extreme, killed for it. During Hester’s brief, illicit liaison with Rev. Dimmesdale (Steve Kidd) they conceived a child named Pearl (Casey Seymour Kim). Hester is publicly scorned and punished after she refuses to identify Pearl’s father. She is put in stockades and required to where a scarlet letter ’A’ on her chest. 300 years later, much has changed; with the obvious exception of the requirement of celibacy for priests.Photo Credit: Peter Goldberg
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