The subtleties of chuckling at Chekhov
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Young Chang
In a time of band camp humor, “Lethal Weapon” shenanigans and
slapstick in which people fall over, bump into walls and drop things,
nine students from Orange Coast College are taking a more subtle approach
to comedy.
So subtle, in fact, that it should first be noted that Russian writer
and physician Anton Chekhov did write comedies. He wrote dramas and short
stories and, yes, funny pieces. But they’re a different sort of humor,
the kind that depends on nuances of words and how the words are played
rather than “hit-you-over-the-head” gestures.
“You go to movies today, and it’s all spectacle,” said student
director Ramsey Schlissel. “We have to have big bangs and special
effects. But in Chekhov’s time, words really had to show humor.”
Three pieces -- “The Bear,” directed by Schlissel; “On the Harmfulness
of Tobacco,” directed by faculty advisor Rick Golson; and “The Sneeze,”
headed by student director Sean Gray -- will be performed by students in
OCC’s Repertory Theatre Company today, Sunday, Sept. 15 and Sept. 16 in
the Drama Lab Studio.
The short comedies will open the repertory’s 2001-02 season, and the
cast is certain that even a pre-revolutionary Russian sensibility will
incite laughs.
“Funny is funny,” said actor Frank Miyashiro, 24. “Our follies and our
insecurities are the matter of laughter and the fertile ground for our
humor.”
But Golson points out that understanding Chekhov is essential to
making Chekhov funny, because his humor is specific to the era.
The comedic language is an archaic, late 1800s Russian-speak,
Schlissel added, with lots of double-entendres and hidden morsels of
meaning that directors need to search for.
“I think he exemplifies the culture of the late 1800s,” the
34-year-old continued. “And his plays show social commentaries of the
day.”
In “The Bear,” a widow named Popova who isn’t much of an equestrian
lauds her late husband’s horseback-riding skills. She says that he had
“such a graceful bearing as he hauled with all his might on the reins,”
unaware that holding back a horse in fear isn’t the mark of a skilled
horseman.
“They were so bound up,” Schlissel said of people at the time.
“Physically, too, that words really had to show the humor.”
Except in “The Sneeze,” that is. Gray, a 23-year-old student at the
school, says the pantomime piece does not involve words. It’s a story
about how somebody sneezes and irritates everybody else in the theater.
“It’s like a silent movie,” he said. “You can’t be that subtle with
pantomime.”
But Golson and Schlissel maintain that the subtleties of Chekhov’s
laughs are valuable to learn during any era.
“Since he’s a classic writer, it’s very good to, as a director, try
different genres,” Schlissel said.
FYI
WHAT: Comedies by Chekhov
WHEN: 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through Sept. 16
WHERE: Orange Coast College’s Drama Lab Studio, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
COST: $6 or $7
CALL: (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1
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