Friends of Caesar
Julius Caesar
By William Shakespeare
Directed and designed by Beverly Bullock
ShakespeareNYC
The Lion Theatre, Theatre Row (410 W. 42nd St.; 212/279-4200)
Equity showcase (closes Aug. 20)
Review by Seth Bisen-Hersh
Julius Caesar is about politics -- loyalty,
betrayal, and manipulation. ShakespeareNYC presented an unabridged, captivating
production of this classic tragedy.
The plot of Julius Caesar centers on the head of
Rome, Julius Caesar, and his next in command, Brutus. Cassius loathes Caesar
and decides to poison the rest of the Senate, including Brutus, against him. He
succeeds in convincing Brutus that Julius is a tyrant and needs to die. The
Senate lures Caesar into a trap, and they all stab him, even his trusted
friend, Brutus. Afterwards Brutus manipulates the masses into thinking Julius
is a tyrant, but Julius’s loyal friend, Marc Antony, convinces them of the
truth -- that the betrayers are the tyrants. There is a war, and all of those
who betrayed Julius are punished as his nephew, Octavius, takes command of
Rome.
Julius Caesar is classic Shakespeare. He shows his
adept knowledge of a crowd’s reaction and manipulation, as well as politician’s
motivations. There is also some humor sprinkled amongst the drama, and at the
end a typical denouement where the new ruler takes over after all the blood of
the older generation has been slain.
Beverly Bullock did an exquisite job with this production.
All of the situations and line readings felt real; the staging made the
intimate space feel like a full city. Her conceit of setting the entire thing
in the South in the 1930s was intriguing, even though not much was done with it
and the accents were inconsistent. The show ran a little long, however; some
trimming of the text would have been apropos.
The ensemble was excellent; there was not a weak link in
the large cast. The highlight was in the ad-lib scenes of fickle crowds, when
the actors vacillated from side to side incessantly and comically.
Technically the show shone as well. James Bedell
created an entire world with his intricate lighting design -- there were
shadows and different colors; each scene had many different cues. The costumes
by Beverly Bullock from the TDF Costume Collection were vibrant and vivacious.
Overall, this was a very good production of Julius
Caesar, with a talented cast and
well-thought-out design and direction.
Box Score:
Writing: 2
Directing: 2
Acting: 2
Set: 1
Costumes: 2
Lighting: 2/Sound: 1
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Copyright 2005 Seth Bisen-Hersh