Sunam Ellis and Dedra Woods in The Revolutionists (John McLellan) |
The Revolutionists
ArtsWest
Through February 9, 2020
ArtsWest is presenting Lauren Gunderson’s play, The Revolutionists.
We’re in 1793 and France is in complete turmoil! The Revolution has turned into
a free-for-all of executions (by guillotine, of course) of royalty and those
who support them. The Jacobins are in power and the Girondins are against them.
“People power” is generally what the populace wants, but how to get there is an
open question.
Journalist Jean-Paul Marat has stirred up the populace with
his rhetoric. Charlotte Corday (Hannah Mootz) decides he is an integral
part of the power structure and if he dies then those fomenting the violence
might significantly weaken. She determines to gain entry to his bath by pretense
and to knife him there.
Olympe de Gouges (Sunam Ellis) is a playwright and
activist who championed Haitians fighting for freedom from the colonialism of
France. She wrote plays on the slave trade, divorce, marriage, debtors'
prisons, children's rights, and government work schemes for the unemployed. As
a playwright, she often was in the vanguard, writing political works on
contemporary controversies.
Gouges wrote her famous Declaration of the Rights of
Woman and the Female Citizen shortly after the French Constitution of 1791
was ratified by King Louis XVI, and dedicated it to his wife, Queen Marie
Antoinette (Jonelle Jordan). But Louis has been executed and Marie comes
looking for Gouges. Marie is fairly certain that she will be carted off to the
guillotine, but she is hoping that Gouges might write Marie’s story so that
Marie can go down in history looking better than the current press about her.
Marianne Angelle (Dedra Woods), a fictional character
of Gunderson’s, represents many Haitian people. She arrives to ask Gouges to
write more pamphlets like those Gouges wrote in 1788 in support of the rebel Haitians.
Also, she represents “Marianne,” a symbol of the French rebellion and support
of democracy as a sort of “goddess of the Revolution.”
Would-be assassin Corday arrives demanding a “last line”
from Gouges so she can make a significant statement before she dies. These
feisty women try to stand up for feminism at a moment when both the monarchists
and the revolutionaries had declined to include women as full “people” and have
declared women’s status as second class. The four women bond over friendship,
writing, words, and womanhood. Over all their heads is literally the guillotine.
In the midst of womanpower and bonding, all is death and the defeat of political
acceptance for women.
Gunderson’s dialogue is current and slang-filled and also
clearly from a 21st Century perspective on women, what their rights and
responsibilities should be, and how they felt about their circumstances. Director
Kelly Kitchens plays up the comedy. Gunderson’s play turns toward drama,
though, in an uneven and difficult maneuver. After a lot of comedy, the play
turns somber.
All three of the historical women die by the end. Angelle
escapes that fate, but her husband back in Haiti is not so fortunate.
The simple platform staging with a ribboned background is a
bit too simple for this production. There is no picture of a guillotine, only a
set of light changes and a sound cue. The guillotine is a potent symbol that
should hover somewhere over everything these women do or say. It’s missed here.
There is much to chew on in the play. Gunderson never puts
less than a full-meal-deal in each of her plays. What is usually most important
is that she celebrates women who are forgotten or betrayed by those who twist
their stories to their own ends. The only woman you probably remember when
thinking about the French Revolution might be Madame DeFarge – or Marie
Antoinette supposedly saying, “Let them eat cake.” Gunderson sets some of that
record clear.
For more information, go to www.artswest.org
or call 206-938-0339.
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