Russia Via
Canada Makes Easy Watching Firebelly's "Nothing Sacred" Is
Turgenev-Lite By
Brad Hathaway October 17, 2007
Where &
When Firebelly Productions'
"Nothing Sacred" plays through November 4 at
Theatre on the Run, 3700 South Four Mile Run
Drive. Performances are Thursday - Saturday at 8
p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10 - $15.
Call 703-409-2372 or log on
to www.firebellyproductions.net.

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Canadian
playwright George F. Walker did more than just translate
Ivan Turgenev's "Fathers and Sons" when he created his
stage play drawing from that famous 1862 novel. Using
modern stage techniques and distinctly modern language
to make the characters as accessible as possible for
modern audiences, he created something very different
than the original 250-page tome. Perhaps that is why
he didn't title his creation "Fathers and Sons."
Instead, his stage version is "Nothing Sacred," and its
tone is distinctly present-day, even if it is set in —
as the vaudevillish poster at the sides of the stage
informs the audience — "Russia in the Spring, 1859."
What is more, the plot has changed considerably.
Walker says this is not an adaptation — it is a play
inspired by the novel. He stays fairly close to the
original characters, which explains why they are given
the same names as in the novel: Bazarov, Arkady,
Kirsanov, Fenichka, etc. The set up to the events is
also quite Turgenev-ish. But it leads to a very
different conclusion.
FIREBELLY PRODUCTIONS, a
company specializing in giving younger talent a chance
at professional experience in roles they can sink their
teeth into, picks up this 1988 play by one of Canada's
most prolific and often produced playwrights (over two
dozen full length plays in the last thirty years).
Robb Hunter is making his local debut as a director,
but it is certainly not the first time his name has
shown up in the programs of local theatergoers. It's
just that, until now, the credit has been "Fight
Direction" or "Fight Choreography" rather than
"Director." As you might expect from someone who has
been on the choreographic side of productions before,
Hunter brings an eye for use of the stage space to this
mounting, even if it is on the fairly small space
available in Arlington County's black box called Theatre
on the Run. He creates very different locales in the
garden stage left and the dining room stage right, and
the path through the woods downstage. Firebelly
veterans Jon Townson and Patrick Flannery are the young
"nihilists," the 1860s Russian equivalent of the hippies
of America's 1960s. Townson uses his light way with a
flippant line to good effect, and he strides across the
small stage with a certain flair, but when he stands
still he often holds one hand in the small of his back
as if striking a pose. Flannery has the more demanding
role as his character is less sure of himself, torn
between admiration for his colleague's ideas and his
affection for his father who still holds on to more
traditional values. The father is played with an
appropriate sense of confusion by Charles St. Charles, a
newcomer to Firebelly but certainly not to local
theater. That confusion is prompted by his character's
dilemma posed by his love for a woman not of his class.
Clarissa Zies is attractive as the woman he loves and
she shows the spunk it would take for her, a servant, to
stand up for herself. Dave Bobb handles the role of
the aristocratic dandy with a sense of humor that keeps
him from seeming too much a fop. This sets up the final
confrontation well. This excursion on the characters
and situations in Turgenev's classic is something less
than classic itself, but it is an entertaining evening
of theater in the hands of these
performers.
Brad Hathaway reviews theater in
Virginia, Washington and Maryland as well as Broadway,
and edits Potomac Stages, a Web site covering theater in
the region (www.PotomacStages.com). He can be reached at
Brad@PotomacStages.com.
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