On
Broadway | Democracy
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- (Brooks Atkinson Theater 2004-2005 season)
It was improbable that Michael Frayn's
historical play about post-war Germany and German politics would
become a major Broadway success - but it has. Perhaps because the
artful drama is based on a notorious spy scandal that
contributed to the fall of Chancellor Willy Brandt.
Willy Brandt (James Naughton) won a Nobel Peace Prize
for his overtures to Eastern Europe, but during the four years that he
was negotiating with East Berlin, Warsaw and Moscow, he was careless,
leaving him vulnerable to close surveillance and betrayal by his
unctuous assistant, Gunther Guillaume (Richard Thomas), who was
actually a spy for the East German secret police.
Peter J. Davidson's duplex set is based on the real
office in which Guillaume worked in the Palais Shaumburg. The upper
tier doubles as Guillaume's cubicle as well as Brandt's political
platform for delivering speeches, while the lower tier is where the
gray-suited politicians meet and converse. It's a highpoint of drama
that, as the Berlin Wall comes down, the shelves of color-coded files
collapse and tumble as well, adding depth to the theme of conflicting
duality. .
Director Michael Blakemore is considered the playwright's alter ego,
having directed eight of Frayn's 16 plays, including
"Copenhagen," and credit Blakemore for simplifying Frayn's
often complicated literary concepts. Yet it was also Blakemore who
cast James Naughton who, unfortunately, evidences little of the
charisma for which Willy Brandt was renown. This is a major flaw since
there is little or no conventional physical action on-stage. In short,
the continual talk becomes quite tedious, punctuated only by the
actors' entrances and exits. It's too bad the original British cast
from the U.K.'s National Theater couldn't have crossed the pond
instead.
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