Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Publication: Ext
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-10
Quick Words:
rev-theatre-Twilight-Wharf
Full Text:
(rev Noel Coward's "A Song at Twilight" at Long Warf, 3/9/96)
Theatre Review-
Coward's Swan Song Works The Tension
(with photo)
By Julie Stern
NEW HAVEN - Noel Coward made his acting debut at age 11; he published his
first play when he was 18 years old. For the rest of his life, he would be
supremely successful in this dual career of writing and acting on the stage
and screen.
In 1966, nearing the end of his life, he wrote - and starred in - a trilogy
that would be acclaimed as his "swan song": Suite in Three Keys (comprised of
two one-act works) and a full-length bitter comedy he called A Song at
Twilight .
Twilight exemplifies what Coward was justly famous for. It is a highly
crafted, tightly plotted work exploring the relationship between a man and two
women, all highly intelligent and adept at verbal swordplay, so much so that
the clever wit of the individual remarks serves as a counterweight to the
mounting dramatic tension.
Currently on the New Haven stage of Long Wharf Theatre, A Song at Twilight
takes place in a luxury Swiss hotel suite. Hugo Latymer, the protagonist, is a
famous writer, now grown into an aged and sickly invalid. Hugo is cosseted by
his pragmatic and imperturbable German wife, Hilde. When the play opens, Hugo
is nervously awaiting a visit from Carlotta Gray, a beautiful actress with
whom he once had a love affair many years ago.
Hilde disappears, arranging for the pair to be left alone. It soon becomes
clear Carlotta is a woman who has come in search of revenge. The affair was
casual cruelty, carelessly dished out and long forgotten by Hugo, but not by
the lady, and she has reached the point in her own life - career over,
marriages ended - when she is living for the sole purpose of paying back the
man who humiliated her.
Hugo is rich and successful, but behind the facade of his public life the
private man harbors dark and painful secrets. It is these secrets Carlotta
intends to expose to the world. The interaction between Hugo and Carlotta, and
subsequently between Hilde and the pair of former lovers, crackles with
intensity.
Fritz Weaver gives a striking performance as the writer who sacrificed
whatever meaningful relationships he might have had for the sake of his art,
keeping himself aloof from real involvement and using other people as material
for his sardonic wit.
Rochelle Oliver, who replaced Tammy Grimes at the last minute, is very intense
as the elegant but grimly focused Carlotta, armed with information that is
more destructive than any handgun.
However, the strongest portrayal of all is by Long Wharf veteran Joyce Ebert,
who gives the character of Hilde levels of depth and complexity that are truly
powerful.
