Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Betrayal - The Losanjealous Review


Robin Roy (Emma) and J. Richey Nash (Jerry) share a moment
photo by James Carey

"Betrayal" by Harold Pinter
Directed by James Carey (no, not THAT James Carey)

The Attic Theatre & Film Center
5429 W. Washington Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90016
Playing until May 12, each Thursday through Saturday @ 8 p.m. Tickets, $20

To begin, a small rant:

For the love of the ever living g*d, why the fuck does every damn theater in Los Angeles County insist on calling its space a theatRE?! We’re not in the UK! We don’t use cheques, the last letter of the alphabet is pronounced “zee” not “zed,” and cricket is a cousin of the locust, not a game.

I mean, really.

A can of pickled herring from the private stock of Dan the LA City Bureaucrat to the best answer to this question. Post your answer in the comments section. And no whining. My decision is final, damnit. It’s my smelly fish, and I’ll give it to whom I please.

I grew up in a part of San Diego called Rancho Penasquitos, which is Spanish for “Rancho Penasquitos.” The main shopping area, which came complete with a Jack In the Box AND a El Pollo Loco, was known as the Penasquitos Towne Centre. This irritated me, and not only due to the dearth of dining options, but because a friggin’ strip mall does not bring to mind Jolly ‘Ole England. It calls to mind Jolly ‘Ole Topeka, hardly the place I want swimming to mind when thinking upon the halcyon days of my youth.

But, anyhow...

“Betrayal” is an excellent play. You should go see it. It has two things I love: a plot (weirdly missing from a lot of current shows) and a twisted time frame. That is, the taleis told backwards, opening at the point where an affair between Emma (Christine Stump/Robin Roy) and Jerry (J. Richey Nash), the heart of the plot, ends.

And then Emma's husband Robert (Christopher Cappiello) shows up, revving up the play's engine and motoring it backwards to its beginning. It's like a stop-motion film of flowers blooming, whithering and dying, only in reverse. It's all the more wrenching, looking at that reformed whole, as we all know Emma and Jerry's love is doomed.

The play has a staccato feel, the lines coming at you fast, deftly transversing the tragic and farcical scenes, and keeping the whole sordid business from collapsing under its own weight. But it slows down too, abruptly switching gears into a series of pregnant (and ultimately stillborn) pauses, making the audience squirm a bit. Emotion! It's what's for dinner.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

TheatRE:
1) the art/business of live dramatic performance
2) the building where I go to watch aforementioned live dramatic performance

TheatER:
1) the building where I go to watch films/movies (i.e. recorded dramatic performances)

That's how I operate, at least.

And Betrayal is one of my favorite plays ever.

Daniel Evans said...

But, that's not what Webster sez...

http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/theatre

"Theatre" is a variant of "theater" meaning, I guess, that either is correct. But, damnit, "theatre" is English nonsense, no?

Anonymous said...

In the same sentence you quote Webster, you say "sez" instead of "says." That is what I call linguistic nonsense.

By "English nonsense," I suppose you mean "British nonsense." The American Civil War ended a long time ago, and we won. So there's no need to rail against the Brits any longer, really. I mean, they have 24-hour bars and pubs now and universal health care; they can't be all that bad.

So, even if it is a variant, which I agree is one interpretation (but not necessarily the *definitive* interpretation), Webster is telling me I can use the spellings interchangably. Ergo, every theatre in LA county is allowed to do the same, according to Webster, the father of the American dictionary.

But, I guess we all have our linguistic pet peeves. I hate it when people say "Evs." HATE IT.