
We opened our 1997-1998 season with one of the most popular of Shaw's plays: Arms and the Man. Written in 1894, and described by the author as "An Anti-romantic Comedy", its title was taken from the first line of Dryden's Virgil. It appeared as one of Shaw's "Plays Pleasant" along with Candida, The Man of Destiny and
You Never Can Tell. It had been completed in a rush. Miss A. E. F. Horniman had backed a series of plays at the Avenue Theatre in London which was being managed by Shaw's friend, Florence Farr.
The first production failed and Shaw finished Arms and the Man in time for it to open after rushed rehearsals, on April 21st, 1894. Hesketh Pearson, in his biography of Shaw, described the opening:
"....the actors, who could make neither head nor tail of the business, played
with anxious seriousness, and were rewarded with a crazy success. The audience
laughed immoderately at nearly everything. Unfortunately, the actors, convinced
by the laughs that this strange piece must be a farce, began to play for
them on the conventional farcical comedy lines; and the first night success
was never repeated. Shaw had planned all the laughs unerringly, but only as
responses to an earnestly sincere performance."
The play closed on July 7th that year. We used the revised text
from the thirties when Shaw edited and reworked many of his plays. It's a
tighter script, better than the 1894 version, even if you do have to pay
royalties on it! All of Shaw's delightful cynicism is here: about love,
the English, pretension, and of course the military mind, all in a delightful
love story. Bluntshli, a Swiss mercenary fighting for the Serbs, is escaping
from a defeat by the Bulgarian cavalry when he climbs a drain-pipe to hide in
the bedroom of
Raina Petkoff, daughter of Major Paul Petkoff ("the highest rank in the
Bulgarian army"). He is exhausted and starving. Raina hides him and
feeds him chocolate creams, his own supply that he carries instead of
cartridges, being exhausted. She is fascinated by his gentility and
sophistication and, the next morning, he is sent safely off disguised in
one of Major Petkoff's old jackets. When the war is over, he comes back
to return the coat and runs into Major Petkoff whom he has met during an
exchange of prisoners. Unfortunately, Raina's fianc�, Major Sergius
Saranof also turns up. He was the man who led the cavalry charge that
defeated Bluntchli's regiment. Louka, the maid, apparently engaged to
Nicola, the manservant, is actually in love with Sergius.
But while Raina is in love with the idea of Sergius, Louka is in love
with the man. Sergius' love for Raina is also more worship of an ideal
than anything practical. Needless to say with all this love flying around,
the Shavian wit flies. It is also turned quite ruthlessly onto the
military and their ideas of war and glory with Bluntshli being the
usual mouthpiece for Shaw.
In the end, of course, all works out well; Bluntshli gets Raina,
Sergius gets Louka and Nicola gets...well he gets lots of potential
customers for the shop he plans to open in Sofia!
Angus Hepburn played the Chocolate Cream Soldier - Captain Bluntshli,
a role he had wanted to play since he first saw the play at the Gateway
Theatre in Edinburgh back in the mid-sixties. Newcomer to the PRT.
Doreen Feldman, a recent graduate from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts,
played Raina, the young Bulgarian girl into who's room Bluntshli dives
to escape the Serbian army. The other PRT newcomers were Dick Smith as
Major Paul Petkoff and Robert Shubin as the Russian Officer. Dick may
have been new to PRT, but is well known to Westchester audiences for
his many musical, comedic and dramatic appearances all over the County.
Robert had worked backstage for us during the 1996-1997 season. Ariane
Orenstein, who played Catherine Petkoff, appeared as Sally Talley in our
very first production (Talley's Folly) and has been a regular
ever since. Steve Plaushin who had last appeared with us in our first Paramount
production, Hay Fever, returned to play Major Sergius Saranoff.
Elizabeth Moritz, who had appeared in Hay Fever, Rumors and
6 Rms Riv Vu played Louka, the 'maid who gets the Major'.
Kurt Lauer (Nicola) had first appeared with PRT in Rumors.
Bob Vitale joined us as Technical Director of the new season.
Because of the usual need to keep sets as simple as possible, we
rationaliped the setting. The first act was set in Raina's bedroom
with the black curtain closed to allow for Bluntshli's entrance
through it. The second and third act sets were combined into a
veranda/porch, dispensing with the library which is the normal
act three set. As a result, set changes were kept to a minimum
and we were able to work with a nicely un-cluttered set.
One other change for the season was that we played for two
weekends with four performances which, although it meant striking
the set between the two weekends, was well worth the effort.
Arms and the Man
by George Bernard Shaw
directed by Stephanie
Cast in order of appearance
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