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Berkeley, Aurora Theatre Company |
So why does Christopher think the oranges in the bowl are blue,
inside and out? Dr. Flaherty swears it is evidence of his psychosis and, although it is
the day set for discharge, is bent on keeping him in the hospital. Dr. Smith, the senior
consultant and Flahertys supervisor, maintains that the color of an orange is
relative to a persons cultural associations and wants to let him go. (Also they are
short of beds and a rapid turnover, in strict adherence to the rules, makes the good
doctor look even better).
Joe Penhalls Blue/Orange
is not so much about mental illness although that is its framework as it is
about power. And ego. And racial prejudice. As the two psychiatrists, one young and
scrupulous, the other older, set on his own agenda and entirely ruthless, square off, the
patient becomes the battleground. Yet Christopher, a young, hip black man in the throes of
delusion, is not without his own power and sometimes uses it to control those who are
trying to control him. Its a wonderful chess game of sorts and the best man may yet
win. You are still guessing the next move after the curtain comes down.
Its easy to see why this
British import won the Olivier Prize on its home turf. Its fast-paced, smartly
written, with brilliant flashes of comedy, and absorbing in its subject matter. If
American audiences dont find parallels to the badly flawed U.S. mental health care
system, they must have been living on a desert island for the past twenty years.
The Aurora Theatre cast, Paul
Oliver as Christopher, T. Edward Webster (Lobby Hero} as his psychiatrist,
Bruce, and Paul Whitworth as the overbearing Dr. Smith, couldnt be better. Oliver,
in dreadlocks and sweats, twitches and rages at one moment and challenges his keepers with
keen intelligence at the next. Convinced he is the son of former Ugandan dictator Idi
Amin, Christopher is totally alienated from the outside world to which he yearns to be
released.
Webster paints a sympathetic picture of a young, caring physician,
caught between his conscience and the system. Yet he is irritatingly condescending to his
patient and confrontational with his superior. Who do you think you are? God?
he challenges him at one point. It is no surprise that he runs into trouble, no matter how
noble his intentions.
Dr. Smith is something else again
and Whitworth, himself a British import who presently is artistic director of Shakespeare
Santa Cruz, takes the character and runs with it. At once filled with his own importance
(I am the senior consultant, he reiterates ad nauseum) and burdened by his own
sense of personal failure (he has never made professor or a million pounds or published
his opus magnum), he bullies Bruce and cajoles Christopher into doing what he needs in
order to further his own career. Its a chilling portrait of a corporate man on the
make and all too familiar. Whitworth is smarmily convincing in the role.
With Robert Ted Andersons
arresting lighting design and Kate Boyds functional institutional set, the
production fits the small Aurora stage space neatly. Auroras artistic director Tom
Ross helmed this one and its arguably the best thing the company has put on all
season.
In the end, it may not matter whether the oranges are orange or blue.
What matters is who owns the bowl.
Berkeley, CA, April 15, 2005 - Suzanne Weiss