[NEohioPAL] Berko review: THE ICEMAN COMETH @ Ensemble

Roy Berko royberko at gmail.com
Wed Apr 24 06:24:23 PDT 2013


*THE ICEMAN COMETH,  a four-hour marathon at Ensemble*



Roy Berko

(Member, American Theatre Critics Association, Cleveland Critics Circle)



Eugene O’Neill, along with such writers as Anton Chekhov, Henrik Ibsen and
August Strindberg, transformed western theatre.  They transitioned the
stage from a place for escapist ideas into a mecca for the examination of
real life problems.  The quartet laid the foundation for what is now known
as “the modern theatre” and laid the groundwork for such luminaries as
Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams and William Inge.



O’Neill wrote in the dialect of the area of the country in which his plays
are set.  He looked at a wide view of the population, and examined the
struggle of people to set goals, maintain their hopes and dreams, and
confront disillusionment and despair.



O’Neill was extremely prolific.  Between 1914 and 1983, he wrote over 30
plays including such masterpieces as ANNA CHRISTI, THE EMPEROR JONES,
DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS, MORNING BECOMES ELECTRA, LONG DAY’S JOURNEY INTO
NIGHT, MOON FOR THE MISBEGOTTEN, all with serious themes, and one comedy,
AH,WILDERNESS.  He won the Nobel Prize and four Pulitzer Prizes for Drama.



One of his epic scripts, THE ICEMAN COMETH is in production at Ensemble
Theatre.



The script was first professionally staged in 1946 and centers on Harry
Hope’s Greenwich Village bar and rooming house.  It’s 1912.  The patrons, a
group of alcoholics who use liquor to dull their senses, spend day after
day, year after year, inside the establishment, forming a dysfunctional
family.  Most are penniless, living off the generosity of the owner, who is
psychologically no better off than his customers.  Three prostitutes hang
around the place which is run by two bartenders.



The group looks forward to the semi-annual visits of Theodore Hickman, know
to them as Hickey.  Hickey, who buys them all booze, tells funny stories,
and relates mythical tales about his wife and her so-called iceman
boyfriend, who supposedly shows up when Hickey leaves on one of his selling
trips.



Hickey is due as it’s Harry’s birthday.  There is much anticipation.  Hickey
arrives, but is seemingly a different person.  Instead of a jokester, he
preaches that “honesty with yourself leads to true peace.”  He attempts to
motive the men to turn off their pipe dreams and return to the real
world.  They
each go forth to face the world without the protection of their liquored
personas.  The results are disastrous, the goals unmet, and the play ends
with a revelation and disillusionment.



THE ICEMAN COMETH is not an easy sit.  It’s four hours of philosophical
investigation of anarchism, socialism, depression and despair.



The Ensemble production, under the direction of Ian Wolfgang Hinz, is well
paced.  The major problem, besides the length, is the poorly staged ending.




Unfortunately, to reveal the problem requires telling part of the shocking
conclusion of the play, but there is no way to avoid it.  One of the
characters commits suicide.  We hear what sounds like a gun shot but the
script lines relate that the victim jumped from a window.  In addition, the
person who is supposed to see him jump is placed on a staircase from which
he could not possibly see the act, resulting in a confounding ending.



The cast is universally excellent.  Dana Hart as Hickey textures his role
with realism.  His almost half-hour fourth act monologue, though overly
long, is compellingly presented.



Other impressive performances include Mitch Rose (Willie) who goes through
agonizing alcoholic shivers and withdrawal before our eyes.



Michael Regnier (Harry) vividly portrays his character’s agoraphobia.



Robert Hawkes (Larry Slade) is the intellect held captive by his need to
escape from past reality or face profound despair.



Bobby Williams (Joe), effectively develops the black man who carries the
strong O’Neill messages of bitterness and envy.



Valerie Young is pathetically real as the hooker who wants a different
life, but can’t escape from this all encompassing world.



*CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: **THE ICEMAN COMETH is a daunting undertaking.  It has
a huge mostly male cast, all of whom have major speeches.  Keeping an
audience’s attention for four act, is nearly impossible.  Ensemble should
be praised for not only the quality of this production, but for taking on
staging this classic.*



THE ICEMAN COMETH runs Thursdays through Sundays through May 12, 2013, at
Ensemble Theatre, housed in Coventry School, 2843 Washington Blvd,
Cleveland Heights.  For tickets call 216-321-2930 or go online to
http://www.ensemble-theatre.org



To see the views of other Cleveland area theatre reviewers go to:
clevelandtheaterreviews.com <http://www.clevelandtheaterreviews.com>
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