Photo: from
left and back to front: Jacob Tice, Christopher Rocco, Joseph Grant and Brynn
Garrett, photos courtesy of Dennis K Photography
“Fear hemorrhages
deliciously within you.”
Published
in the Weekly Volcano, Oct. 27, 2016
from left and back to front: Jacob Tice, Christopher Rocco, Joseph Grant and Brynn Garrett, all photos courtesy of Dennis K Photography |
Tacoma
Little Theatre’s rendition of Dracula is creepy, funny, horrifying, and
hauntingly beautiful. A highly stylized presentation as directed by Pug Bujeaud
with outstanding sets (Blake R. York), lighting (Niclas R. Olson) and costumes
(Michele Graves); this production is the epitome of theatricality.
Often
throughout there are overlapping and widely spaced scenes and foreboding
figures moving behind a scrim, all of which lends to the production the
dreamlike feel of a moving balletic tableaux.
Michael Christopher as Dracula and Jacob Tice as Harker |
Brian Wayne Jansen is Renfield |
York’s
set design features columns and a riser painted to emulate stone with two large
and equally stone-like boxes that double as beds and coffins, all dramatically
highlighted by floods of blood red and cold blue light and a profusion of
smoke. Cast members rather than stage hands move props and set pieces. The way
this is done, rather than being a distraction, set changes become integral to
the action.
Director
Bujeaud wrote in a program note, “[Dracula] is often portrayed as a creature of
romance and loss. While I have enjoyed many of the forays into that version of
Dracula … this is not that. This script by Steven Dietz neither embraces that
romantic tint, nor does it delve into camp that productions are often laced
with. What we have here is a story that relies heavily on Bram Stoker’s
original text.”
While it
is true that this version is not romantic, and thankfully not camp —there’s
been quite enough of that — it is highly eroticized.
Early on
there is a sexy romp in bed between the leading female characters, Mina (Jesse
Morrow) and Lucy (Brynn Garrett), both of whom behave in a sexualized manner
with each other and with Dracula (Michael Christopher). Also highly erotic are
the slivering and cavorting of the unnamed and silent Vixens (Ariel Birks and
Kadi Burt).
The cast
is great. Jacob Tice displays a range of acting skills as Harker, Mina’s
hapless lover and repeated victim of horror. Christopher Rocco, new to Tacoma
stages but a favorite in Olympia, primarily in Theater Artists Olympia
productions, is convincingly humane and human as Seward the doctor who is in
love with Lucy; and veteran actor Joseph Grant is believably obsessive as
Professor Van Helsing.
Other
than dramatic poses in caped majesty and the viciousness of his attacks,
Christopher plays Count Dracula with subtle undertones, resisting the natural
tendency to camp it up.
And then
there is the madman, Renfield, played by Brian Wayne Jansen. Oh my god, Jansen
is a force of nature. He plays the mad, immortal, Renfield like a combination
of Hannibal Lecter and King Lear. He is funny, frightening and full of
surprises, lurking in his little asylum cell off to the side of the stage and
then bursting onto the main stage in explosions of insanity. If he were doing
this on Broadway, he would be a surefire Tony winner.
This
show is not for children, and it is not for the squeamish. It is sophisticated,
intelligent (and a little bit funny) adult fare.
Dracula, 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:00
p.m. Sunday, through Nov. 6, $20-$24, pay what you can Nov. 3, Tacoma Little
Theatre, 210 N “I” St., Tacoma, 253.272.2281, www.tacomalittletheatre.com.
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