Students Bring Quartett’s Sinister Eroticism
to Life
BY CHANNING JOSEPH
This weekend, Heiner Müller’s Quartett continues performances in Fairchild
Chapel, fittingly celebrating Friday the 13th with a presentation of
dark humor and sadistic obsession. Opening yesterday and scheduled to
close with a Saturday matinee, Carl Weber’s English translation of Quartett
was directed by sophomore Ben Stuber and assistant- directed by sophomore
Rachel Samberg, in the tradition of Müller’s German experimental theater.
(photo by Steve Freed)
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Based on the 18th century French novel
by Choderlos de Laclos, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, the play was a one-hour
glimpse into the lives of French aristocrats Valmont and Merteuil, as
they sardonically displayed the bitterness and lust they felt for one
another while discussing both sinister and erotic fantasies.
The play benefited and suffered from being performed in Fairchild Chapel,
as the building’s stone walls and stained glass windows added to the
production’s moody, gothic feel. Unfortunately, the chapel’s intensely
echoing acoustics rendered many of the actors’ words incomprehensible.
The atmosphere of the production was reminiscent of an Anne Rice vampire
novel, as suggested by lines like, “Every word rips a gash, every smile
bares a fang.” Yet the actors’ costumes and make-up also contributed
to a Halloween theme with performers wearing black, formless drapes,
stylized masks, face paint and Merteuil displaying a silver corset.
The set was one of the highlights of the production, along with the
costumes. It consisted of an altar draped in white cloth at the stage’s
rear, on top of which stood a life-size mannequin with spikes in its
hands, alluding to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
Stuber’s interpretation of the play incorporated choreographed movement,
mask and the presence of three demon figures — Lamia, played by sophomore
Lily Matini, Asmodeus, played by sophomore Matt Franks and Mara, played
by first-year Maya Ray-Schoenfeld.
Throughout the play, the demons danced about the actors, suggesting
the inevitable damnation of Valmont and Merteuil for their cold, scheming
ways. Sometimes, their presence seemed distracting and superfluous,
at other times, they created memorable moments, such as the opening
scene, where they writhed sensuously with Merteuil until she reached
the peak of excitement, screaming, “The agony to live and not be God.”
Merteuil, played by sophomore Allison Moon, was a delight to watch,
as she portrayed the sensuous temptress with a refreshing emotional
sincerity, which in other actors might have been outdone by a desire
to play a melodramatic caricature of the cold-hearted villainess. Her
skillful use of tempting glances and teasing gestures easily seduced
Valmont, as well as the audience.
Valmont, played by junior Adam Marvel, displayed a more mercurial nature.
At times, Marvel’s performance suggested a clown or harlequin, dancing
about Merteuil with humorous ripostes like, “I shall open my veins…with
scissors since I am a woman. Every trade has its jokes.” At other times,
he took a more authoritative stance, as when he forced Merteuil to perform
fellatio on him. In either case, the mercuriality in his character seemed
appropriate, as Valmont and Merteuil often pretended to switch identities
in the play. Ultimately, the highlight of the play’s acting was Moon’s
and Marvel’s willingness to be emotionally vulnerable on stage, without
which this play might have become a cartoon.
In the end, Quartett left the audience member with more questions than
answers. In the show’s programs, Stuber wrote, “My advice is to embrace
Quartett for what it is. One is not supposed to grasp every ambiguity
or [learn] any prepackaged lesson.” At a later point, he said that his
intention was to let “the work speak for itself, because that’s all
the audience is going to see anyway.”