Red Paints a Bold Portrait at Lakeshore Players

Red is a fictional account of the relationship between artist Mark Rothko and his assistant, Ken. To call it a “relationship” might suggest they connected on a personal level—which, at first glance, they do not. Their dynamic appears to remain strictly that of boss and employee, or perhaps teacher and student. The play unfolds as a series of conversations between the two men about art—what it is, what it means, and how each interprets and values it.

On reflection, though, one might reconsider the claim that they never connect personally. After all, what could be more personal to an artist than their beliefs about art? Though they withhold most details of their private lives, they reveal their deepest convictions to one another in the area that matters most to them: art.

The production takes place in the Black Box Theatre of the Hanifl Performing Arts Center. Seating is general admission, and the theater is kept on the cooler side. The intimate setting is well-suited to this two-hander, which is set in Rothko’s studio.

Both roles are played by actors I was unfamiliar with prior to this production, but I won’t soon forget them. Justin Hooper, who identifies primarily as a scenic designer, plays Rothko. He alternates between curmudgeon and lecturer—full of opinions and impatient with fools. He is the kind of mentor the mentee both admires and resents. Hooper excels, perfectly capturing the cantankerous artistic temperament while also exposing the intellectual workings of a man who deeply understands what art is and represents.

Brian McMahon plays Ken. He begins timid and unsure, but by the end, he is standing up to Rothko and calling out his hypocrisies. McMahon skillfully conveys Ken’s initial hesitancy while gradually giving his character a stronger voice and growing conviction. When the two finally clash in heated exchanges, the sparks truly fly.

Red offers an engaging glimpse into the life of a working artist, from preparing a canvas to mixing paints. It feels like a play about painters where you actually leave with a slightly better understanding of what an artist does and how they think about their art form.

Red runs through October 12 at Lakeshore Players Theatre in White Bear Lake. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit lakeshoreplayers.org/red-season-73.

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Legacy of Light at Theatre in the Round

Anna Olson, Rachel Postle, and Emma Tonn Photo by Tom Taintor

Legacy of Light is the second ply by Karen Zacarias that I’ve seen at Theatre in the round. The first was The Book Club Play which has a run coming up at Lakeshore Players this March. Of the two plays The Book Club Play is the more entertaining of the two, but Legacy of Light is definitely the more ambitious work. The scenes alternate between France in the 1700’s and New Jersey present day. They have common themes connecting the two timelines, astronomy, love, pregnancy, ensuring family is cared for, nontraditional procreation relationships, and family histories. The connection happen thematically and by the end the two threads don’t just compliment each other but actually intersect in several surprising ways. It’s generally well acted, though it wasn’t until the second act that the characters gelled into what they are intended to be.

In the past we follow Emilie du Chatelet, who is the wife of the Marquis du Chatelet, the mother of
Pauline, the lover of both the young poet Saint-Lambert, and the older Voltaire whom she collaborated with on philosophical and scientific works. She becomes pregnant at 42 and fears due to her age and the fact that she almost died from a previous pregnancy that she will not survive the childbirth. In the present day we follow Olivia, an astronomer who may have discovered an embryonic planet, she’s a cancer survivor who can no longer bear children. She and her husband Peter contract a young woman named Millie to be a surrogate for their child. Millie is doing it for the money so that she and her brother Lewis can pay off their debts which have mounted since the death of their mother the previous year.

David Denninger as Voltaire and Hawken Paul as Saint-Lambert and Lewis, are the two Actors who seem to have taken their characters, at least initially in directions that don’t mesh with their characters at the end. But perhaps this is the script or Kari Steinbach’s direction. Voltaire at first seems to be a character we are to see as ridiculous, but that idea is completely wiped from our idea of the character by the end. Saint-Lambert seems the young romantic before becoming ridiculous. Their fight at the outset while humorous seems to come at the cost of a unified character. Paul’s second character Lewis remains constant throughout, which is that of a completely idiotic tunnel visioned and illogical manchild. Paul plays the role well, but it is a character that is hard to feel anything but frustration and dislike for. Rachel Postle as Emilie du Chatelet, Anna Olson as Olivia are very strong as is Emma Tonn as Millie and Pauline, though there is more for her to do as Millie she does get a few good scenes as Pauline as well. Finally Mark Sweeney gets to show a little versatility as a rather direct and centered man in the past and a more easy going, and low key husband in the present day storyline.

The set design by Sadie Ward works well with some creative lighting cues from Lighting Designer Bill Larsen. The apple tree being a nice touch and the math equations and celestial markings painted on the floors and walls combined with light projections of astronomical shapes are nice touches. The period costumes are especially well realized by Costume Designer Colleen O’Dell. Legacy of Light runs through March 16th at Theatre in the Round. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatreintheround.org/legacy-of-light/

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