TOM TITUS -- THEATER
Theatergoers who regularly frequent South Coast Repertory and are
plugged into HBO at home have the opportunity of seeing how a play born
on SCR’s Second Stage has evolved into a gripping viewing experience with
world-class talent.
On Saturday, the pay cable TV channel presented its first airing of
“Wit” by Margaret Edson, which first saw the light of day at SCR in
1995. It’s the story of a cold, demanding college professor who’s now
being treated for ovarian cancer by one of her former students -- and
aching for the touch of humanity she habitually denied those in her
class on 17th century poetry.
In the local world premiere, Megan Cole delivered a bravura
performance as Dr. Vivian Bearing, taking playgoers through the painful
step-by-step process of treatment a patient must endure. Subsequent
stagings in New York with Kathleen Chalfant and Judith Light brought the
play the Pulitzer Prize for drama.
In the HBO production, the central role falls to renowned actress Emma
Thompson, whose superlative portrayal has “Emmy” written all over it.
Thompson delivers the performance of her distinguished career as she
endures the pain and humiliation of the insidious disease, while waxing
ironic to the end.
It’s not an easy show to watch. Particularly for me, since less than
a year ago a close friend succumbed to the same disease. But it’s
brilliantly laid out by director Mike Nichols who, with Thompson,
“refashioned the script” for the HBO version.
The televised production is dotted with notable names and faces --
Christopher Lloyd plays it straight for possibly the only time in his
career as Thompson’s primary doctor and playwright Harold Pinter has a
brief, undemanding stint as her father.
But the strongest support comes from Jonathan M. Woodward as the
ex-student and research fellow -- a role endowed with far more humanity
than Edson’s original script offered -- and Audra McDonald as a caring
and supportive nurse. Eileen Atkins’ tender cameo as Thompson’s former
mentor reading her a bedtime story as she lies dying is priceless.
SCR’s Jerry Patch represented the Costa Mesa company at a recent New
York seminar hosted for those who have contributed to the development of
“Wit,” and he remarked that this play, a first effort from schoolteacher
Edson, “is literally changing the way we treat cancer in hospitals.”
The HBO treatment is “very faithful to the text of the play,” Patch
noted, though it has lost much of the incidental humor accorded the
original.
If you have HBO -- or know someone who does and can tape it for you
-- don’t fail to experience this compelling and intellectually
challenging drama. Look for “Wit” to be in the forefront when the
television industry honors its own -- and re-christens its awards the
“Emmas.”
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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