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Under Siege
by Deidre McFadyen
Largo Desolato reviewed November 3, 2006
Erik Kever Ryle and Skyler Sullivan
Photo Credit: Joshua Briggs
Following his release from prison in Czechoslovakia in 1985, Vaclav Havel took just four days to write Largo Desolato, his semi-autobiographical play about a dissident philosopher paralyzed by his fear of being imprisoned once again and by the outsized expectations of his countrymen awaiting his next words.

While communist totalitarianism may be a thing of the past, and Havel would go on to become his country's president for 13 years, his play remains deeply resonant for our own age of anxiety, surveillance, and liberty challenged.

The Tyna Collective's trenchant production, in a fine translation by fellow Czech Tom Stoppard, is part of a six-week, 16-play festival of Havel's work timed to coincide with the playwright's 70th birthday and a brief residency at Columbia University. Director Eva Burgess teases out the play's black humor while never losing sight of its seriousness of purpose. To the play's obvious debts to the theater of the absurd, Burgess adds touches of Brechtian artifice, such as the seating of the actors in the front row when they are not onstage.

The play unfolds on David Evans Morris's fanciful set, which consists of a spare living room with four stand-alone doorways at back leading out to the entryway, the balcony (denoted by a plant and a painting of a blue sky), the bathroom, and the rest of the apartment.

Professor Leopold Nettles, author of Ontology of the Human Self and Phenomenology of Responsibility, has retreated to his apartment, suffering from writer's block and quaking at each ring of the doorbell. Nettles is not even able to articulate his own state of alienation, instead parroting the description offered by a concerned friend. When "they"—a bumbling duo of secret police—finally do arrive and offer him "a once in a lifetime chance for a fresh start" if he will disown his former identity, the offer appeals to him since he no longer recognizes himself in the husk of a man he has become.

Erik Kever Ryle
Photo Credit: Joshua Briggs
Largo Desolato, with its minimalist plot and masterfully orchestrated repetition of scenes, dialogue, and situations, calls for a formal rigor in its execution. Burgess delivers by guiding her cast toward tight, disciplined performances and by coaxing a clean and uncluttered aesthetic from her design team.

In the demanding lead role, Erik Kever Ryle achingly communicates Nettles's growing despair and impotence while also conveying the charisma and sparkling intelligence that would have garnered him such attention in the first place.

The rest of the cast is uniformly stellar. Joshua Briggs and Jon Okabayashi are hilarious as the sneezing, daft detective and his even more clueless partner. Another delightful comic duo are Janet Ward and Skyler Sullivan, with mirroring performances as the tall and short Sidneys from the local paper mill, who declare themselves fans of Nettles and bear down on him to fulfill his obligations to ordinary people like themselves.

Martin Lopez's simply cut, vivid costumes, Juliet Chia's full, steady lighting, and Ken Hashimoto's striking musical punctuation hew tightly to the overall style.

During this fraught moment in our own country's history, it is fitting to revisit the lifework of a distinguished playwright who so seamlessly wedded politics and morality. There may be no better introduction to Havel's work than this incisive staging of a work that's considered to be one of his greatest plays.

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LARGO DESOLATO

Ohio Theater
Category:  unknown
Written by:  Václav Havel, Translated by Tom Stoppard
Directed by:  Eva Burgess
Produced by:  Tyna Collective
Opened:  November 3, 2006
Closed:  November 25, 2006
Running Time:  1 hour, 35 minutes (no intermission)

Theater:  Ohio Theater
Address:  66 Wooster St
New York, NY 10012
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BOX OFFICE
Tickets:  $18.00
None
CREDITS
Creative Team
Written by:  Vaclav Havel
Translated by:  Tom Stoppard
Directed by:  Eva Burgess
Produced by:  Tyna Collective
Light Designer:  Juliet Chia
Composer/Musician:  Ken Hashimoto
Set Designer:  David Evans Morris
Costume Designer:  Martin Lopez
Choreographer:  Rachel Feinberg
Assistant Director:  Christopher Conant

Cast
Erik Kever Ryle as Professor Leopold Nettles
Brian Quirk as Edward
Jennifer Boutell as Suzana
Janet Ward as First Sidney
Skyler Sullivan as Second Sidney
Nancy Nagrant as Lucy
Greg Skura as Bertram
Joshua Briggs as First Chap
Jon Okabayashi as Second Chap
Jennifer Boutell as Marguerite

Crew
Stage Manager:  L. Jay Meyer
Sound operator and Web site designer:  Franz Palomares