New Muses Theatre Company presents August Strindberg’s Miss Julie at Dukesbay Theater
Published in the Weekly Volcano July 9, 2015
Miss Julie (Katelyn Hoffman) and Jean (Nick Spencer). Photo by Niclas Olson. |
Strindberg’s
classic play Miss Julie was extremely
controversial when first produced in France at the end of the 19th
century. This newly adapted version by Niclas Olson’s New Muses Theatre Company
and performed in Tacoma’s Dukesbay Theater in the Merlino Arts Center building
is dark and slightly confusing, but definitely in keeping with the author’s
naturalistic style.
By slightly
confusing I do not mean that the story doesn’t make sense, but rather that the
main characters, Miss Julie (Katelyn Hoffman) and Jean (Nick Spencer), are
confused about their own motives, desires, and feelings for each other. During
the opening night performance I was swept up with their confusion and felt
disoriented throughout much of the play. It bothered me at first that no matter
how excited or angry Miss Julie was, Hoffman portrayed her with cool
detachment, and it bothered me that I could not get a handle on whether or not
Jean loved or hated, idolized or was indifferent to Miss Julie. I thought
Hoffman’s strange way of staring off into space and her tightly controlled
passion were signs of stifled acting, but I gradually began to realize that she
was portraying a strange character with utmost naturalism.
Kristin (Kelsey Harrison) with the dog Dianna (Roxy). Photo by Bethany Bevie |
Naturalism
to Strindberg meant everything from sets to lighting to acting should be
unadorned; i.e., not theatrical. Olson, who not only adapted the play but also
directed it and designed the set, created a simple kitchen with heavy wooden
tables and simple kitchen implements of a style that would have been used in
the day (with the possible exception of the terrycloth wash rags, and I’m not
too sure about the beer bottles). His only concession to theatricality was a
beautifully painted floor, an even more beautiful scrim at the back of the set,
and lighting that is subtle but which becomes strikingly dramatic in a moment when
Miss Julie looks up at the rising sun burning through the kitchen window and
the light glows on her face.
During the
course of a single evening, the spoiled daughter of a French count, Miss Julie,
and her father’s valet, Jean, engage in flirting and fighting, an implied
sexual tryst, and heated arguments about class, religion, and the roles of men
and women. Some of this takes place within the hearing of Jean’s fiancé, the
cook Kristin (Kelsey Harrison), whose relationship with Jean is also convoluted
and strife-filled.
Miss Julie
is haughty and demanding but wishes she could come down to Jean’s level. She
dreams of falling from her aristocratic heights, and she demands that Jean the
servant tell her what to do and says she will follow his orders. And Jean, who
is more worldly and well-read than one would expect from someone in a servant
role, vacillates between being subservient and defiant. He asks her to run away
with him, but neither of them is really sure they want to. Their seemingly unsolvable
conflicts culminate in a tragic end that is strongly suggested but not
explicitly stated.
The story is
deceptively simple yet filled with complex social, philosophical and moral
questions. It is well acted and directed.
Miss Julie runs 80 minutes with no intermission.
Miss Julie, Friday.-Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Sunday, 2 p.m. through
July 19, added production July 16 at 8 p.m., Dukesbay Theater in the Merlino
Arts Center, 508 South 6th Ave., Tacoma, $10, www.NewMuses.com/Miss-‐Julie.html
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