Will Lord of the Rings, Opening March 23, Get to Be a Hobbit With
Audiences?
By Kenneth Jones
23 Mar 2006
he Lord of the Rings, the J.R.R. Tolkien-inspired stage spectacle
created by an international team of artists, opens in its Toronto
world premiere March 23 at the Princess of Wales Theatre.
Like the massive three-part fantasy novel and film versions that came
before it, the music-infused, three-act production with a running
time of more than three hours is nothing if not ambitious. Director
Matthew Warchus, who co-adapted the novel (with Shaun McKenna) for the
stage, is in charge of the $27 million (Canadian) production, which
boasts 70 actors (which includes 49 plus a battery of support people)
in a 2,000-seat venue.
Previews began Feb. 4. If The Lord of the Rings is a hit with critics
and audiences, international productions are expected to sprout (first
in London in 2007 and then Europe, but not in the U.S. until 2008),
but first things first: Will it become a theatregoing hobbit er,
habit in Toronto?
The opening follows more than two years of design, script and music
pre-production. Rehearsals began in October 2005. The cast includes
experienced classical actors working alongside acrobats, stilt-walkers
and singers. The troupe is largely Canadian, with others hailing from
the United Kingdom, Australia and United States.
By the first preview $15.5 million (Canadian) had been generated at
the box office, producer Kevin Wallace said. He hoped to be "knocking
on the door of $20 million" by the opening night. At press time,
Playbill.com could not discover if the goal had been met.
Producers Wallace and Saul Zaentz, in association with David & Ed
Mirvish and Michael Kohl are behind the open-ended-run that employs
hundreds of artists, technicians and support staffers.
With a score penned by A.R. Rahman, the Finnish band Värttinä, and
Christopher Nightingale (with lyrics by McKenna and Warchus), is The
Lord of the Rings a musical?
"The books are absolutely full of characters who sing to express
themselves," producer Wallace said, "but let's stick with calling it
'a theatrical event.' When the characters draw on music to express
themselves, they draw on songs which are ancient to their culture or
their species."
There is no big "I Want" song, as there usually is in traditional
American musical theatre. But music still pours out of the production.
The writing credits, much like a musical, also include listings for
"book and lyrics" (by McKenna and Warchus).
Calling the show a "musical" might be in the eye or ear of the
theatregoer.
Set and costume design is by Ron Howell; lighting design is by Paul
Pyant; sound design is by Simon Baker for Autograph; music supervision
is by Christopher Nightingale; moving image design is by The Gray
Circle; "Tolkien creative consultation" is by Laurie Battle; special
effects design is by Gregory Meeh; illusions and magic effects are by
Paul Kieve; musical direction is by Rick Fox; orchestrations are by
Christopher Nightingale, Rahman and Värttinä; and choreography is by
Peter Darling.
VIPs expected at the 6:30 PM curtain for opening include Rachel
Tolkien (granddaughter of J.R.R. Tolkien), actress Louise Pitre,
actress Cynthia Dale, Toronto Mayor David Miller, artist Frank Stella
and many more.
For more information, visit www.lotr.com.
*
The stage, proscenium and walls of The Princess of Wales Theatre in
Toronto have been taken over by the most unusual flora you may ever
see growing indoors: A massive tree trunk and its twisting roots.
This earthbound and metaphoric image, designed by Rob Howell, gives
the world premiere theatrical epic, The Lord of the Rings its focus.
Just as in the titular fantasy-novel trilogy by J.R.R. Tolkien, a
natural world be it forest, shire, mountain, swamp or volcano
becomes a playing area for characters who are magnetically pulled
toward good and/or evil.
The production doesn't include members of the cast rushing out into
the auditorium during action, but the scenic elements do spill out
over the proscenium and onto the ceiling of the theatre.
"It creeps out, this root system," producer Kevin Wallace told
Playbill.com in the days leading up to the Feb. 4 first preview, "over
the boxes of theatre and out toward the circle and second balcony.
That is the environment within which the story is told".
Lighting designer Paul Pyant is lighting it out to the extremities of
that environment, as well, Wallace said.
"The focus of the story is in this fabulous 45-foot diameter, huge
tree trunk, which is the conceit of the stage design, and which has
within it, the revolves and the lifts which take us from one location
to another," Wallace explained.
There wasn't a major tearing-out of rows of the Princess of Wales'
2,000 seats to accommodate the action, Wallace said, although Rick
Fox, the conductor of the 18-musician orchestra, will lead the band
from what used to be row AA.
While The Lord of the Rings, directed and co-adapted by Matthew
Warchus, is billed as an epic theatrical event with spectacular visual
elements, producer Wallace said there is something paramount to the
visuals of the experience: the clarity of the storytelling.
"The reassuring point right now is that the story is ringing true and
clear and that the arcs of the acts are beautiful," Wallace said. "We
feel that we've got the arcs of the acts right
"
The "arcs" are not to be confused with the orcs or the elves, men,
dwarfs, hobbits, wizards and undead who populate the plot-heavy three
parts of the Rings fantasy epic (the three parts of the novel are "The
Fellowship of the Ring," "The Two Towers" and "The Return of the King").
The précis of the tale is this: Great evil is taking over the world
(called Middle Earth) and an innocent, child-size hobbit named Frodo
can eliminate the evil by destroying its talisman an ancient, cursed
ring by tossing it into a faraway volcano. Sounds easy, no? The
path, of course, is fraught with obstacles an evil wizard, a spider,
a gorge or two.
FAITHFUL TO THE BOOKS
Do the three acts of the stage version coincide with the books in the
same way the three recent films followed the novels?
"They don't, strictly speaking, no," Wallace said. "The first act does
culminate in the battle between the Balrog and Gandalf the Grey. And
the second act finishes with Paths of the Dead."
Fans of the Tolkien epic who were disappointed with the films'
excision of the chapter that includes the destruction of the shire by
men will be pleased to know the furry-footed creatures Frodo, Sam, Pip
and Merry do indeed lead a hobbit uprising against those who took over
their world.
"We're true to the books, we do go back to the shire with Frodo and
the hobbits," Wallace said. "The third act naturally culminates with
Frodo's departure, [but] we deal with the fact that Sharkey has
destroyed the natural beauty of the shire
and that men and Sharkey
have imposed their rule on the shire. We deal with the hobbits'
uprising and with them regaining control of the shire."
The character of nature lover Tom Bombadil, also axed in the recent
films, is referenced (but is not seen) in the stage version.
"He gets an honorable mention in the show," Wallace said. "He has a
wonderful reference from Treebeard, as Treebeard is saying farewell to
the hobbits. That's the sort of touch we wanted in terms of our
sensitivity to the story."
Wallace added, "There are little touches like that, I think the
Tolkien fan will appreciate and they don't distract in terms of the
core of the story for those people who don't understand the weight of
the mention
"
Wallace said he's been "quietly confident" about the intelligence,
clarity and faithfulness of Shaun McKenna and Matthew Warchus'
adaptation since an April 2005 London workshop, attended by editors
from the late Tolkien's publisher, HarperCollins U.K.
"We invited, among others, the two chief editors Chris Smith being
one of the eminent editors," Wallace said. "At the reception
afterwards, he came up and said to me, 'It's a great adaptation.' We
believe we're truly honoring Tolkien in the story that we're putting
on the stage, and the principal themes that run through the books. To
get that message from him was a very affirming one. I do feel
confident the true Tolkien fans, who have come to Tolkien through the
books, will respond to this piece and will see that we understand
Tolkien."
Wallace said the collaborators and Laurie Battle, their Tolkien
creative consultant, are "ensuring that the language as used by each
character is not only appropriate to the drama and the story and is
interesting in terms of text, as used by an actor but is also
appropriate in terms of the examination by a dedicated Tolkien fan or
indeed a Tolkien scholar. You really are dealing with a level of
scholastic comment which is very detailed and very sophisticated."
As in the books, Wallace said, "the anchor of the emotional journey
for the audience is the four hobbits."
ACTORS AND SCRIPT
The richness of the attempt at a successful stage experience is not
only about the detail and arcana of the fantasy novels, but about the
real, warm-blooded actors who bite into text, moment and situation.
Wallace said, "I'm thrilled by the fact that it is a unique take, an
overwhelmingly inspired visual take on the book, and yet what rings
true is the text and the use of language that these wonderful actors
have this language, which has the same economy classical theatre has."
Are whole pieces of dialogue lifted from the books, or do McKenna and
Warchus put words in the mouths of the characters?
"There are some lines which are taken [from the books]," Wallace said.
"'Fly, you fools!' a famous line from the book, that Gandalf shouts
to the fellowship. That is there. There's a wonderful phrase that
Gandalf says to the hobbits: 'May the hairs on your toes never fall
out' that's from the book. But in essence, it is McKenna and
Warchus' words but always either true to Tolkien or in some places
actually using Tolkien."
Wallace said that actors were encouraged to experiment and make
discoveries about their characters, just as they would in any good
rehearsal process for a classic (or modern) play. The reason to invite
respected classical actors such as Brent Carver (who plays wizard
Gandalf) or Michael Therriault (who plays poisoned Gollum) is because
you know they will dive deeply into their characters.
In the cast, you would be hard-pressed to find an actor who hasn't
dipped into Shakespeare's pool. Carver and Therriault have played
major roles at Ontario's Stratford Festival, two hours west of
Toronto. Carver won a Tony Award for Kiss of the Spider Woman, the
musical.
THE CAST
Frodo, the Hobbit ring-bearer, will be played by young British actor
James Loye; Evan Buliung will play Aragorn, the king-in-waiting;
wizard Saruman, the leader of the White Council corrupted by his lust
for the Ring, will be played by Richard McMillan (Scar in the Canadian
Premiere production of Disney's The Lion King); Peter Howe is Sam,
Frodo's faithful friend (Howe was discovered by LOTR creative team in
London after he wrote to the London production office requesting an
audition; this marks his professional stage debut); Canadian Dylan
Roberts is Merry and Irishman Owen Sharpe is Pippin; Gabriel Burrafato
(of the recent Hal Prince-supervised Evita tour) is Legolas; Rebecca
Jackson Mendoza is Galadriel, Lady of Lothlorien; Dion Johnstone is
Boromir; Carly Street is Arwen; Ross Williams is Gimli, the dwarf
warrior; Victor A. Young will play Elrond; Kerry Dorey is Théoden and
Kristin Galer plays Rosie.
The ensemble consists of Greg Armstrong-Morris, Joel Benson, Alexandra
Bonnet, Brent Buchanan, Matt Cassidy, Mike Cota, Susan Dunstan, Joe
Eigo, Josh Epstein, Omar Forrest, Matthew Gagnon, Nicholas Gede-Lange,
Don Gough, Graeme Guthrie, Colin Heath, Peter Huck, Chilina Kennedy,
Krystal Kiran Garib, Bryce Kulak, Monique Lund, Shannon Lynch, Ayrin
Mackie, Colin Maier, Patrick McManus, Tyler Murree, Philip Nero, Danny
Pathan, Sean C. Robertson, Louise St. Cyr, Vincent Tong, Peter Van
Gestel, Fraser Walters, Sanders Whiting and Shawn Wright.
Director Matthew Warchus previously said in production notes, "I am
particularly proud of the huge diversity of skill in the company.
Wonderful, experienced actors will be working alongside acrobats,
stilt-walkers and outstanding singers, all pooling their talents to
bring this magical story alive on the stage. Given the size of the
show, this is bound to be the most grueling production process any of
us has been through
"
http://www.playbill.com/news/article/98633.html
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