Leave It Alone, Mr. Russo

It was brave and dangerous of  The Sherman Playhouse, now in its 83rd season, to present Oscar Wilde’s “Salome.â€� Brave because the play, written in 1891, does concern timeless themes of obsession, power, political intrigue, even incest.  Dangerous because Wilde filled the script with flowery, poetic language; iteration and reiteration of his leitmotifs — the moon, blood, white skin; and outside the famous dance of the veils, little action.  

   Of course, the play isn’t about Salome at all.  It’s really about Herod, her stepfather, who is racked with ambition (Herod killed his brother for the throne), guilt (not only did he kill his brother, but he married his brother’s wife, Herodias), lust (he desires his stepdaughter, Salome, in unspoken ways), fear (the imprisoned prophet, John the Baptist, may be right in what he foretells, so Herod won’t turn him over to the religious Jews who want to try him).

   The action takes place at a banquet in Herod’s palace, where John is captive in a cistern. Salome comes on stage, delivers a paean to the moon, hears John’s voice and experiences what the French call a coup de coeur — an intense but fleeting infatuation (after all Salome is a teenager) — that the mystical John rebuffs.When the petulant, angry princess agrees to dance for Herod, who has promised to give her whatever she asks, Salome demands John’s head on a silver platter.  And gets it.

   Director Joseph Russo has chosen to mount the show in “a more or less timeless fashionâ€� (read modern dress) which makes the dialogue, intriguing as poetry no doubt, sound even more stilted and exaggerated in performance. But he did make two shrewd castings:  John Taylor, an Englishman who once acted professionally, is very good as the tortured Herod; and Katherine Almquist gives Herodias hauteur.

   Alas, the rest of Russo’s cast struggles with this melodrama.

   Katya Collazo, Salome, does manage a decent and daring dance: She is naked except for a thong at the grand finale. But such daring hardly makes up for the long stretches of pedestrian line reading.  Charles Roth as John, or here Iokanaan, is another declaimer in his role.  And there are risible touches from the director.  Salome asks for the head on a silver tray over and over again:  When it comes it’s held by the hair, no tray.  

   And Roth’s hair is brown, even though Salome talks (at length) about its blackness. (Hair on the severed “headâ€� is black.)

   And then there is the ending. Salome’s overwrought monologue to the severed head (which Richard Strauss made glorious in his opera) here finds Collazo slowly lowering the head until it rests snugly between her spread legs. (Get it?)  Absurd, since Wilde’s shock ending — Salome’s kissing the dead lips — is quite enough for Herod, who orders her death.

    And for us.

    Russo should have left it alone.

   The Sherman Playhouse is at the junction of routes 37 and 39 in Sherman, CT.  

   “Salomeâ€� runs through Aug. 2.  

   Call 860-354-3627 for performance schedule

and tickets.

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