Review: Miller's CRUCIBLE Roars Its Power at CP

By: Nov. 04, 2017
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Powerful men abound in the annals of drama, but few can vie with the formidability of Deputy-Governor Danforth in Arthur Miller's THE CRUCIBLE. Reminding the petitioning Francis Nurse just exactly whom he's dealing with, he can honestly claim to have jailed nearly 400 people in various towns across Massachusetts with his signature - and sent 72 to the gallows with that many strokes of his pen.

"We burn a hot fire here," he warns soon-to-be martyred John Proctor. "It melts down all concealment."

If those declarations sound to you like they should be spoken softly, you are not reading them the way stage director Tom Hollis did for the current CPCC Theatre production at Pease Auditorium. Panoramic Pease is a challenging place acoustically, often frustrating audience members, especially the elderly, who chance to be seated in one of the side sections, trying to hear what actors are saying at the other end of the stage.

Anybody who has been reluctant to go to Pease, or stayed away because of that frustration is now encouraged to come back. There has never been such a roaring production at Pease - or anywhere else on the CPCC campus. It would be misleading to say that it begins with Tim Huffman, who gives a fearsome account of the Dep Governor in the climactic scene at the Salem Meeting House, ground zero of the infamous Salem Witch Trials. He doesn't appear in the drama until the second scene after intermission, or Act 3 in the original script.

We don't hear anything about the full extent of Danforth's rampage until he announces it himself, but the steady roar of the panicked citizens of Salem - and the shrieks of the pubescent girls who incredibly become their accusers - testify to the hysteria that has gripped the whole colony. Reverend Samuel Parris intrudes upon his servant Tituba leading a pagan moonlight ritual, with his daughter Betty and his niece Abigail Williams among her acolytes, in a marvelously creepy scene that Miller added to his 1953 script for his 1996 screenplay.

The secret of how that cinematic lagniappe was converted to stage may be locked in a local recipe, since the brief prologue isn't referenced in the playbill's rundown of the scenes. When we cut to the original opening scene in an upstairs bedroom of the Reverend's home, Parris is huddled over the seemingly comatose Betty who will not waken since returning from her midnight revels. As great as Parris's fears may be for his daughter's life, his greatest fear is that the word "witchcraft" might be whispered around town about members of his family. His career is at stake.

The fear flips Reverend Parris from his initial condemnation of Betty and Abigail to becoming their staunchest supporter no matter how outrageously they overreach in their reign of terror. Cole Long may be giving us the most chilling performance here as Parris for he is never in the least soft-spoken. This rabid weasel speaks in a passionate, panicky squeal that threatens to shatter glass, most heinously in his waspish attacks upon John Proctor. Long's high-voltage intemperance makes it easy for Huffman to become mightily annoyed with his zeal.

Hollis also finds strong - yet sweet - voices for the two most important accusers: Sarah Clifford is the implacably wicked and wanton Abigail, and Ashley Gildersleeve is the ambivalent Mary Warren, the witness Proctor enlists to debunk Abigail's masquerade. Interestingly, Mary is Abigail's successor in the Proctor household, hired after Abigail was told to hit the road when she had committed adultery with a now-penitent John.

Clifford gives us a shameless and forceful Abigail. Hollis is wise to include the nocturnal confrontation between Abigail and Proctor, written B. Miller for the stage shortly after the original Broadway production, for it reveals Clifford's full range. Switches between Abigail's vamping, seductive mode to her imperious affirmations of divine judicial authority can be played so abruptly that the wench can seem to have an insanely split personality. But Hollis and Clifford find the bridge between the two Aby's in her arrogant self-confidence - she obviously has no doubt that John will ultimately succumb to her charms.

Gildersleeve proves to us that Mary is also quite a powerful role, pulled ferociously hard in opposite directions by John and Abigail, pivotal in the outcome of the climactic court scene. Hollis is going against the usual impulse to cast Mary as a diminutive mouse who will cower in the proximity of the domineering Abigail. Making her more substantial magnifies the power of both adversaries who tug at her, and Hollis - not withstanding today's political correctness - does not gloss over John's abusiveness toward his servant.

The biggest payoff with Gildersleeve is how taut the tension can become before Mary makes her fatal choice. We can see that she isn't going to break easily. When inevitability sets in, the chaos that breaks out in Danforth's court is as alarming as you'll ever see, like a vast cauldron coming to a boil and overflowing.

Nothing less can bring Josh Logsdon down in his hulking, near-Promethean performance as Proctor. There are few mild-mannered moments in his tragic odyssey toward the gallows. If, as he claims, he has walked tiptoe around his own home since his great sin, Logsdon certainly turns the corner when John confronts Elizabeth, raging and roaring at her like a tyrant before her unexpected arrest. Then he turns on the gendarmes with leonine fury as they take her into custody. Then on the quailing Mary, who has brought the incriminating poppet to his house from Salem.

Torn between taking advantage of Abigail's affection and risking her fury, Logsdon is comparatively becalmed in their forest scene, but he's only truly temperate in the presence of the Dep Governor when Elizabeth's fate hangs in the balance. Even then, we see him as a powder keg, ready to explode in a heartbeat.

The Gothic aspects of such sulfurous action are somewhat muted by the raked and abstract set design by Beth Aderhold and costume designer Jason Estrada's execution of what could have been Hollis's most daring concept - transporting the 1692 atrocities to the McCarthy Era 1950s when Miller's tragedy premiered. But the concept gathers little further momentum. We find no TV in the Proctor home that could be tuned to the HUA or Army-McCarthy hearings, and no projections on the blank upstage wall from contemporary newspapers heralding the anti-Commie hysteria that Miller was obliquely targeting.

It's Caryn Crye who unexpectedly brought me the strongest flashback to the 50s as Elizabeth. Again and again, Crye's quietly assertive and judgmental portrayal evoked the Emmy Award-winning Audrey Meadows in her iconic role as Alice Kramden on The Honeymooners (1952-57). This is a cold and grudging Elizabeth who knows a woman's place yet never backs down. She comes to see her own failings and their causes in the poignant final dialogue with John. Yet when we hear her last words, it's hard to discard the notion that nothing less John's march to the gallows could convince her of his complete atonement for his infidelity.

The depth and power of the CP cast helps to shine new light on Miller's lesser characters. Giles Corey usually comes off as a contentious, litigious, and ultimately harmless old fool, but Tom Ollis - among the loudest actors we have - bellows him to a different place, now fully consistent with the defiant eulogy Elizabeth gives him. Reverend John Hale is also prone to trivializing, apt to be portrayed as a naïve student who needs the books he carries to substantiate his witch-sleuthing credentials.

Tony Wright plops those books down in the Parris bedroom as if he has read and absorbed very word, needing them merely to double-check his vast erudition and point out chapter and verse to the common folk who have hired him. Most Hales seem to be windblown by the dizzying events in Salem, but Wright's is open-minded and discerning, ultimately bewildered by the insanity that surrounds him, still grasping and feeling the tragedy as deeply anyone.

My only disappointment was Corlis Hayes, who starts off so spectacularly in her second pass at Tituba at CP, where she also excelled in 2001. Abetted by James Duke's lighting design and Marilyn Carter's movement coaching, she's an object of terror in the opening blood ritual. She "lays low" obsequiously enough, if I might be permitted an Uncle Remus allusion, as cries of witchcraft pursue her like the Eumenides. Hayes breaks so pitifully under the merest pressure that it's almost comical.

Ah, but when she reaches the prison - the first to be branded a witch - Hayes mangles the words of Rev. Parris's hapless servant so badly that they are unintelligible. That's a shame, because Tituba has the freshest, wittiest, big-picture perspective on the whole Puritan catastrophe.

"Devil, him be pleasure-man in Barbados, him be singin' and dancin' in Barbados. It's you folks - you riles him up 'round here; it be too cold 'round here for that Old Boy."

Those who profess to fear and loathe Satan come to rule in 1692 Salem - zealots, scoundrels, and a pack of screaming she-wolves led by a vengeful, slatternly she-devil - wreaking havoc that even Satan might marvel at. Miller wrote THE CRUCIBLE in 1952 to show postwar Americans that history can repeat itself, destroying us from within. Miller's message still resonates in post-2016 America, and CP is serving it up scorching hot at maximum volume.


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