Shotgun Players Impress With Their Take on Brecht's Threepenny Opera

Sam Stander
Thursday, December 10, 2009
The Daily Californian


Long before "American Psycho" or "A Clockwork Orange," Bertolt Brecht created a charismatic monster for the ages. Macheath, the central figure of Brecht's "The Threepenny Opera," is sickening, but also maddeningly fun to watch. In the Shotgun Players' production of the raucous 1928 opera, directed by Susannah Martin at Ashby Stage, Jeff Wood imbues the role of the venal arch-criminal with just the right mixture of gusto and ambivalence. But he's not alone - he's surrounded by an equally exuberant cast, who endow Brecht's polemical play with an air of sinister joviality.

The "opera" (more of a musical, by modern standards, since it is not entirely in song) follows the exploits of the London-based villain Macheath, who keeps out of prison for his many transgressions only because he's old army buddies with the chief of Scotland Yard. As the play opens, he's about to wed Polly Peachum (Kelsey Venter), the seemingly naive daughter of Jonathan Peachum (Dave Garrett), the wily self-proclaimed king of the beggars. Peachum wants him out of the picture, so he coerces police chief Tiger Brown (Danny Wolohan) into incarcerating old Mackie, but not before Polly warns her new husband to get out of town. All of this happens on the eve of the Queen's Silver Jubilee, as Mackie's gang and Peachum's beggars prepare to hassle and hustle the crowds.

Wood preaches his bourgeois bullshit to the audience with a smoothness evocative of a young Bowie, and his chemistry with Wolohan in their scenes together is impressive, but he's not even the finest performer on display. The show's star act is Kelsey Venter, whose doe-eyed Polly explodes with cynical sexuality and justified contempt as the plot unfolds. Her masterful take on "Barbarian Song" may have been the best musical performance of the night. Also virtuoso was Bekka Fink as Mrs. Peachum; her venom on "The Ballad of Sexual Imperative" was hard to beat. In fact, the whole Peachum clan stands out, with Dave Garrett delivering a smarmy but knowing turn as Mr. Peachum. Less exciting was Beth Wilmurt as Macheath's favorite whore, Jenny - she was strong in Shotgun's "This World in a Woman's Hands" earlier this season, and she's fine here, but she lacks the anger and sexual power that are fundamental to this world-weary character.

The production's aesthetic is a self-conscious ode to 1977 punk culture - apparently a fashionable frame of reference for Berkeley theater, if Impact Theatre's "See How We Are" back in September was any indication. The stage is festooned with graffiti and the costumes are printed with nihilistic slogans ("I'm biding my time"), but the text hasn't been tailored to fit the resetting, so it feels more like complementary imagery than any sort of uncomfortable reinterpretation.

Martin's staging creatively foregrounds Brecht's famous use of Verfremdungseffekt, or "distancing effect." In order to keep the audience from becoming too cathartically wrapped up in the action, each scene of the play and each song is announced by white projected words on the stage, sometimes featuring aphoristic explanations of the action onstage. In keeping with the production's punk-influenced costuming and stage design, three microphone stands roam the front of the stage, and all songs as well as many lines of dialogue are performed into the mics, facing the audience.

Kurt Weill's magnificent tunes are performed by a band stationed at the back of the stage, punningly billed as the Weillators. Occasionally, members of the cast will filter in and out of the band as players. For the first few numbers, including the opening tune, best known by the title "Mack the Knife," the band sounded shambling and loose, but this was probably an intentional affectation as they tightened up for punchy performances of "Pirate Jenny" and "Second Threepenny Finale," among others.

Though entirely entertaining on a gut level - funny, shocking, intense - Martin's interpretation cleaves quite close to Brecht's deconstruction of the conventions of traditional theater. The audience is constantly reminded that this is "not real life, but opera." Though we can surely get a kick out of the aggressive delivery of "Cannon Song" or relish the catfight dynamics of "Jealousy Duet," we're ultimately urged by the work's self-aware symbolism to take something away besides a thrilled grin. But amidst the already 80-year-old bagging on the bourgeoisie and this production's peculiar combination of punk iconography and contemporary symbols such as the Abu Ghraib photographs, it seems there are any number of political interpretations to take away.

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