Lysistrata
A play about making war - and not making love... The Talbot Theatre
production
of Lysistrata both entertained and delighted this member of the
audience, who
was there partly because of an English assignment requirement,
but mainly
because of the opportunity to enjoy a live theatre production. The
theatre
company employed many different components to bring this antiwar play
to life
that evening on the stage. These components can be broken into three
categories,
which visually enhanced the text of the play. The first of these
categories is
the setting, the stage lighting, and the props. The second
component is the
symbolism of some of those props, and the third component is
the character
portrayals by the actors on the stage. To take us back to
ancient Greece, the
props master employed a very simple interpretation using
columns on a raised set
of steps, with a backdrop of blue. To add to the feel
of the era, a statue
stands in the middle of the platform. This platform
serves double duty as the
Akropolis and as the Citadel, both of which the
women have occupied. When the
men light a fire below the walls of the
Akropolis, smoke pours out of the bundle
of sticks, making it appear as if a
fire has really been ignited. Fortunately
the women are ready and the fire is
extinguished and the men all doused with
water, which is portrayed well with
buckets and actions that look as if the men
are being driven away by the
water. When Kinesias comes to see Myrrhine, and
they head off to Pan’s cave,
the stage lighting is dimmed to give the effect
of the darkness of being in a
cave. The most strikingly visual use of stage
props is the appearance of
larger than life erect phalluses under the tunics of
all the male main
characters during the second half of the play. These seemingly
grotesque male
members serve to symbolize the frustration of the men. However,
they are also
a symbol of how the men’s political power has been superceded by
the
primitive urge for sex, and how the women now hold power over the men.
The
statue, which is on the platform, is dressed in armor and symbolizes the
war.
The shield is taken by the women to be used for the purpose of
swearing their
oath, but they quickly realize that they cannot swear for
peace on a shield used
for war. This warrior statue disappears at the end of
the play, reappearing as a
female, the statue of PEACE, considerably
shapelier and more enticing to the
men. The characters presented the most
impressive visual component. Lysistrata
was portrayed perfectly as a
down-to-earth woman who has had enough of war and
is willing to lead a
revolution to end it. Most of the rest of the women are
portrayed as being
frothy little things, more interested in clothing, shopping
and sex,
interests which Lysistrata feels that she can employ to bring about
the
change in the men’s attitudes. The costumes on the main characters evoked
the
image of the time, and helped to define the characters. Both the members
of the
female chorus and the male chorus are dressed in white, to keep them
separate in
our minds from the main characters of the story. However, they
are employed in
such a way in the play as to explain a lot of the story to us
by carrying a lot
of the action and dialogue of the altercations between the
sexes. The main
characters employed a number of acting techniques to convey
the images of the
play. Lampito carries herself differently and speaks with
an accent, and
although she is dressed somewhat the same as the other women,
we realize that
she comes from Sparta. The Magistrate struts on to the stage,
accompanied by a
constable, only to be harassed and ultimately humiliated by
the women, who will
not be arrested. They turn the tables on the constable by
tying him up with his
own rope, and then send the magistrate and the
constable packing. Comic moments
happen when the desperate-for-sex women try
to sneak away from the Citadel and
are caught by Lysistrata. One of these
women takes the helmet from the statue
and tries to simulate a pregnancy that
was not there the day before. An
excellent portrayal of a frustrated husband
is seen when Kinesias comes to find
Myrrhine. This is the first
appearance of a male with a very large protuberance
under his tunic, and
Kinesias has all of the facial expressions and body
language of a man being
teased and frustrated by his wife. Lysistrata has taken
this opportunity to
coach Myrrhine to torment and tease him to reinforce the
cause. After
Kinesias leaves, more male characters appear with the same
suffering and
misery visible below their belts. We sense that the time is near
for the men
to give in and begin talks with Lysistrata and the women. When peace
is
finally achieved, it is a time for drinking, music and dancing. There is
a
solo sung by one of the Spartans, who is then joined by more people in a
dance.
Finally all of the group, both the men and the women are dancing
and joyous.
This ensemble has taken a play that is timeless in its
message, and through the
use of props and stage lighting has taken us back in
time to mingle with, and
enjoy the characters that live this story.