The Conversation
– Pyewacket Theatre ** WORLD PREMIERE **
Chicago Sun Times Review
Highly Recommended
An enthralling 'Conversation'
Heidi Weiss, Chicago Sun Times Theatre critic
Published Jan 28th 2005
Fans of "The Conversation," Francis
Ford Coppola's strange, sinister, deeply disturbing, eerily
prescient 1974 film, might have been more than a little worried
when they heard that Pyewacket Theatre had decided to create
a stage adaptation of the work. After all, why meddle with such
a memorable cinematic gem?
As it turns out, the worriers can rest easy.
Adapter Kate Harris, in collaboration with director Kenneth
Lee, a terrific cast and a collection of savvy designers --
led, most crucially, by that brilliant maestro of sound Joseph
Fosco -- have devised an altogether haunted and haunting production
that is at once utterly faithful to the movie and creepily riveting
on its own terms.
Coppola, who granted Pyewacket the rights to his
work on the basis of Harris' script, sent the company a good-luck
e-mail prior to opening. His faith in the project (which follows
on the heels of the company's huge success last season with
"Misery," the Stephen King novel-turned-movie) has
not been misplaced.
"The Conversation" was Coppola's variation
on two earlier classics: "1984," George Orwell's cautionary
tale about Big Brother and the corrupting power of an all-knowing,
all-controlling political regime, and "Rear Window,"
Alfred Hitchcock's tale of an impotent (metaphorically) photographer
who doesn't really see the full picture.
In his film, Coppola updated the technology to
match an increasingly bugged, electronically wired society (and
one just on the brink of computerization). And he directed Gene
Hackman in a chilling performance as Harry Caul, the troubled,
guilt-ridden, middle-aged loner and master in the art and science
of surveillance -- an expert who hires himself out to both government
agencies and private clients, and who ends up very much like
a character in a tale by Kafka as the victim of his own pursuits.
When we first see him, Caul (Robert Skrocki in
a superb, utterly convincing performance) is working on a case
that involves his taping of a young couple, Ann (Aasne Vigesaa)
and Mark (Steve Best), who meet for a daily walk in San Francisco's
busy Union Square. Such moving targets are a test of his skill,
and he has managed to get a very large percentage of their conversation
recorded. Precisely what it reveals, and the consequences of
what he has captured on tape, are difficult to tell. More menacing
still is the fact that when he delivers the tapes and collects
payment for his work, he is stonewalled by an assistant (Mark
Hicks) while the actual client, Mr. C (Ron Quade), refuses to
see him.
Ironically, while Caul spies on others he is obsessively
hermetic about his own life. If there is a perfect metaphor
for his existence, it is the fact that he lives alone in a tiny
apartment and plays the saxophone accompanied by Music Minus
One recordings.
Caul has a girlfriend, Amy (Joan McClive, deeply
moving in her big scene with Harry) -- a woman much younger
than he, whom he visits from time to time and helps "support"
financially. But he is unwilling to share a single bit of personal
information with her.
And when his usual discretion slips a bit at a
convention for surveillance experts (there is marvelously competitive
and sexually smarmy byplay here), he pays the price. He's betrayed
by his nerdy assistant Stan (nicely ambivalent work by Doug
Long), his rivals (first-rate character turns by Quade and Fred
Husar), a pair of good-time girls (a brilliant, complex portrayal
by Harris that goes far beyond the stereotype, and fine comic
relief from Margaret Katch as the ditz) or some or all of the
above.
Mood is of the essence here, and Lee and his actors
have captured the hidden, guilty, nervous, vaguely paranoid
aspect of all these characters' lives in what is a very adult
story. Scenic designer J. Branson's solution for conjuring dozens
of settings -- Japanese-style screens that slide in and out
of place -- not only creates a world of movable, vaguely transparent
walls, partial views and unstable situations, but it also pays
homage to the cinematic origins of this work. Jared Moore's
wonderfully shadowy lighting and Jennifer Zielinski's polyester-perfect
costumes add to the effect.
But "The Conversation" is, first and
foremost, a work about the aural environment. Sound is crucial
to content, and Fosco has done a bravura job of weaving in every
possible sort of cue -- from reel-to-reel replay to traffic
sounds and toilet flushes. The noise of the streets and the
noise of the psyche play in perfect counterpoint.
Arriving 30 years after the film, this stage version
still projects all the same fractured chatter and emotional
terror. No need to update the technology when the story is so
of the moment.
Read Chicago Tribune
Review
Stage version of '74 film 'Conversation' still
relevant today
Kerry Reid, Special to the Tribune
Published Jan 26th 2005
Francis Ford Coppola's 1974 film "The Conversation"
about a surveillance expert embroiled in danger was the perfect
cinematic response for a year in which a bug-happy American
president was brought low by his own scheming and paranoia.
The story still resonates in post-Patriot Act America. Wisely,
Kate Harris' adaptation for Pyewacket doesn't attempt to update
Coppola's story. She and director Kenneth Lee simultaneously
use some of the best conceits of the film while creating a three-dimensional
theatrical experience, and the result is a frequently gripping
and sad portrait of urban anomie and moral quivocation.
As Harry Caul, Robert Skrocki has the unenviable
task of stepping into Gene Hackman's shoes, but he does so with
an air of stodgy austerity that hints at deep torment. In one
of the strongest scenes, he runs out on his young adoring girlfriend
(Joan McClive) when she begs him to tell her something about
his life. As his surname suggests, Harry is wrapped in an isolating
membrane, and he lives in painful denial of what his occupation
has done to his ethical core.
Joseph Fosco's clever sound design re-creates
the aural suspense of the film, while J. Branson's set picks
up on the voyeuristic theme by using a series of sliding semi-opaque
screens, and Jared Moore's lighting captures the empty coldness
of Harry's apartment and studio with chilly precision. Some
of the performances were a bit wobbly on opening night, but
Harris is terrific as a seductress, and Skrocki's Harry is fascinating
— equally sympathetic and repulsive.
Through Feb. 26 at Chopin Theatre, 1543 W. Division
St.; $10-$25 at 773-275-2201
Read Chicago Reader
Review
Highly Recommended
The Conversation
Jack Helbig, Theatre Critic
Chicago Reader
Published January 27th 2005
Highly Recommended
At Chopin Theatre thru February 26th
8pm Thurs-Sat; 3pm Sunday
Tickets $10-25 at 773.275.2201
Francis Ford Coppola's 1974 film, about a wiretapper
enduring a personal crisis, appears an unlikely candidate for
transfer to the stage. The tight montage and brilliant sound
design in particular would seem difficult to re-create in a
live production. Yet Pyewacket does a great job of finding stage
equivalents for Coppola's cinematic effects. Adapter Kate Harris
and director Kenneth Lee play scenes over and over, just as
Coppola reruns footage again and again to indicate his protagonist's
growing obsession with one of his surveillance subjects. And
Joseph Fosco's clever sound design conveys as well as the film
does the process--including the pitfalls--of assembling a coherent
"overheard" conversation from multiple hidden-microphone
recordings. The play really belongs to Robert Skrocki, however,
who conveys the inner turmoil of the protagonist, Harry Caul,
nearly as well as Gene Hackman.