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Shakespeare Behind Bars始s Richard the Third
by Jack Heller. Written on 2013-07-11. Published in Reviews from the ISE Chronicle.
For the production Richard III (2013, Shakespeare Behind Bars, USA)
Last week, I attended the production of Shakespeare始s Richard III at the Luther Luckett Correctional Complex in LaGrange, KY. When I tell people about
Shakespeare Behind Bars, the question they ask me most frequently is, “Are they any
good?” The related questions are, “Can they put on a good show?” “Do they understand
the plays?” “Do they know how to act?” The answer to all of these questions is yes.
However, I want to recast these questions to two which I have rarely been asked: What
is the audience experience of attending a Shakespeare Behind Bars production, and
how do its productions compare to other productions I始ve seen?
I have seen a few hundred plays in the past 25 years, and nine plays so far in 2013.
The shows I始ve attended have ranged from Royal Shakespeare and West End plays in England,
numerous plays at the Stratford Festival in Canada, and professional theatre in Chicago
to many community theatre productions in parks and churches and college and university
productions. My experience with attending plays is probably atypical of most of the
audience members who attend a SBB production, many of whom are there because they
are the family and friends of the inmate actors. Other identifiable groups of the
audience are prison staff members, social activists, sometimes a smattering of students
who have previously taken a field trip to the prison, and a few academics like me
and the two colleagues I attended with this year.
Attending a Shakespeare Behind Bars production begins with commitment. The Luther
Luckett Correctional Complex limits the number of outside visitors to eighty per show
for four shows. An interested person must request permission to attend no later than
three weeks before the shows begin, and rather than buying a ticket, one must complete
a form for a criminal background check. If more people request an opportunity to attend
than the prison will accommodate, then the priority for attendance goes first to the
inmates始 family members, then those who support SBB financially, and then others as
space permits. The commitment requires attending a play on a week night (Monday –
Thursday), arriving at the prison in the late afternoon, going through a security
check, leaving your license and getting wrist-banded at the entrance, waiting up to
45 minutes in a visitors始 area before entering the chapel where the play is performed,
and following the prison始s visitors dress code. There is also the commitment of getting
to the prison itself. Relatives travel from hours away in Kentucky, my group traveled
4-5 hours to attend, and one inmate始s sister attended from as far away as Texas. Nothing
about attending a SBB play is typical.
The performance occurs in the prison始s chapel, which has been used for the shows since
the performance of The Winter始s Tale in 2010. This is a different space from the visitors始 room, which was used for performances
before 2010, including for The Tempest in the Shakespeare Behind Bars documentary. The chairs have been arranged to face the front of the chapel, which
can be a disadvantage to an audience member if a scene is played close to the floor.
During the performance of Richard III, Richard uncovers and looks upon the corpse of the dead King Henry, all of this below
the line of sight for anyone sitting beyond the second row. However, the switch to
the chapel has seemed more suitable to the nature of Shakespeare Behind Bars始s work.
The visitors始 room had seemed a space between the inmates and the audience, an area
of intersection of our lives. In the chapel, we enter into the prison, into the area
of the sacred in the inmates始 lives where the work of their souls is evident. The
visitors始 room felt institutional. While the chapel is also institutional, its space
is designed to be more accommodating to the encounter of players and audience.
The Shakespeare Behind Bars men have been at it for 18 years. This would have some
of the men performing more Shakespeare than most professional actors not associated
with one of the repertory Shakespeare festivals. Jerry “Big G” Guenthner performed
Richard, Duke of Gloucester as if he had been left the world for him to bustle in.
His bustling was even more impressive as he worked without his left arm and hand which
were costumed into a sling. When Lady Anne (performed by Hal Cobb) spit in Richard始s
face, he wiped his face and seemed to taste her spit. Then he removed the ring from
his right hand with his mouth and placed it on Anne始s finger to win her over. Spit
for spit, nothing would seem to stop Richard from getting anything he wanted.
Many Richards are most concerned for establishing their authority. Guenthner found
more of the humor possible in the role, disarming the audience始s resistance to his
villainy, not by winking and nodding at the audience, but by upping the outrageousness
of his behavior. We are still startled with Buckingham when Richard tells him just
to chop off Hastings始s head if he won始t go along with their plots. It turns macabre
when Richard swings a bag with Hastings始s head around as if it were just happened
to be holding while he was talking. Guenthner始s Richard knows that he operates like
a villainous Falstaff.
For any particular play, a number of the SBB men may also be in their first or second
productions. Last year, a colleague mentioned one performer, Christopher Lindauer,
who did not seem to be in character in his scenes. This year, Lindauer played Queen
Elizabeth, who has the job of winning a battle of wits with the wittier Richard. Elizabeth始s
outrage gives her a quicker wit than Lady Anne, who really should have known better
than to trust Richard earlier in the play. One of the joys of attending SBB productions
over a number of years is the opportunity to see several men grow in their abilities
as performers and take responsibility for their own actions. Lindauer始s Elizabeth
recognized that what she does affected more than her daughter始s future, but the future
of the country. His was a serious and fully engaged performance.
A Shakespeare Behind Bars production makes the best of the circumstances of its space.
In the Shakespeare Behind Bars documentary, Ryan Graham observes that if he were playing Ariel on a professional
stage, he would be attached to a wire and flown over the audience. The story presentation
in Shakespeare Behind Bars productions is straightforward, not given to the idiosyncratic
whimsy of the director, but to the connection to the inmates始 own lives. (1) In 2010始s
production of The Winter始s Tale, the appearance of the allegorized time in the second act gave the men an opportunity
to engage the audience with the time that they have served behind bars. In Richard III, Tyrell, acted by Mario Mitchell, served as Richard始s designated assassin. Productions
today typically have Tyrell be one of the unnamed murderers of Clarence and of Hastings,
so when Tyrell spoke killing the princes—“The tyrannous and bloody deed is done. /
The most arch of piteous massacre / That ever yet this land was guilty of”—Mitchell
represented a simultaneous remorse and fear of discovery of his remorse by Richard,
who in his misplaced contentment would reward Tyrell for the deeds Tyrell would regret.
Moments such as this are the point of connection between the plays and these performers.
This year, the men performed before a photographic image of the Tower of London,
so clear as to seem tactile to the audience. As we went to the chapel, we had to pass
the segregated housing unit, often referred to as “the hole,” with windows as narrow
as those we saw in the image of the tower. The plays operate in the space where the
men live.
Shakespeare Behind Bars productions have some innate limitations based on where they
are done. The inmates must wear their costumes over their prison khakis. It is no
big deal that the women roles are played by men, as we know that Shakespeare始s women
roles were originally play by males. However, an audience member may have to suspend
some disbelief when a Portia needs a closer shave or a Juliet is in his late 30s.
The level of talent does vary somewhat within the company. Occasionally a performer
will slip out of his character or rush his speech too much. However, the men work
hard to choose roles that enhance their personal growth and develop their acting abilities.
They rehearse around two hundred hours per play. The totality of the shows has been
equal to the best productions I始ve seen of college and community theatre productions.
In 2014, those who can should make every effort to attend Shakespeare Behind Bars始s
next production, Much Ado about Nothing.
(1) I can始t help thinking here of Robert Falls始s “daring” professional production
of Measure for Measure at Chicago始s Goodman Theatre, which, against any indication of the play text itself,
ended with Barnardine killing the heroine Isabella. No such follies occur in a Shakespeare
Behind Bars production.