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Critics' Forum Article - 03/01/2008

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  • Critics' Forum Article - 03/01/2008

    Critics' Forum
    Theater
    Finding the Universal in Ibsen's A Doll House
    By Lori Yeghiayan

    Question: What does a play, written in Norwegian in 1879 about a
    woman's journey toward personhood and freedom from repressive social,
    gender and class norms, have to do with the Armenian community?

    Answer: The play, A Doll House, by 19th century Norwegian playwright
    Henrik Ibsen, was recently produced by Glendale's Luna Playhouse - one
    of Los Angeles' only theatres founded and operated by Armenian
    artists - and directed by Luna Playhouse Artistic Director, Aramazd
    Stepanian.

    The majority of Luna's audience, according to Stepanian, is
    Armenian.

    So, why produce an Ibsen play?

    "Because it's one of the greatest plays ever written. It's just a
    great play. What situations! What characters! What deep
    psychological insight!"

    That was director Stepanian's enthusiastic response when I asked him
    that question on a recent Saturday afternoon visit to Luna. We sat in
    the theatre - momentarily empty while the cast and crew of the upcoming
    My Heart's in the Highlands, by William Saroyan, were on break from
    rehearsal - and chatted about Stepanian's production and the play's
    relevance to a contemporary audience.

    A major work by one of the most influential playwrights of modern
    Western theatre, Ibsen's A Doll House (commonly translated as A
    Doll's House) is an early example of "realism" - a genre characterized
    by an invisible "fourth wall" that remains unbroken by the actors.
    It is as if in the midst of the characters' lives the fourth wall of
    their living room were removed, allowing the audience to peer in on
    the action as it unfolds.


    The play opens on the living room of the Helmer home and on the lives
    of Torvald and Nora Helmer, a young married couple with three small
    children and several servants. Theirs is a seemingly happy home.
    Husband Torvald is a bank manager, wealthy and respected; wife Nora
    is beautiful and devoted, cheerful in her domestic duties. Into this
    stasis arrive Nora's less-privileged childhood friend Kristine Linde
    in search of a job and Nils Kroggstad, an employee of Torvald's at
    the bank - a man desperate to regain his lost status in the community.
    Also a key figure: the Helmers' friend and frequent visitor, Dr.
    Rank, who is in love with Nora and who, despite his money and high
    status in the community, is terminally ill - rotting from the inside
    out from an inherited disease.

    All of the characters are victims of what Ibsen sees as the diseased
    and destructive forces of oppressive societal standards of marriage,
    gender and social class that deny them the freedom to develop into
    full human beings. The dramatic action of the play exposes the weak
    foundations of Nora and Torvald's marriage and propels Nora out the
    door in search of knowledge and her authentic self.

    Though the final action of A Doll House - in which the main character
    Nora leaves her husband after eight years of marriage calling herself
    a "doll-wife" and their home a "play-room" - may have lost its power to
    shock, the play still has a lot to say to a contemporary audience.
    The psychological truth of the characters has made it a classic,
    relevant to almost any modern community - whether the view out that
    community's windows is the Norwegian Fjords or Glendale's Verdugo
    Mountains.

    The Luna Playhouse production was directed with precision and depth
    by Stepanian and was confidently acted by a uniformly solid cast.
    Stepanian chose to set the play in northern Europe in the late 1950s,
    and Maro Parian's detailed set and costumes served the production
    well, especially in establishing the time period. Henrik
    Mansourian's lighting design also added to the realistic setting,
    with some nice lyrical moments, such as the rapid fade to moonlight
    during the love scene between Nora and Dr. Rank, as the sun sets on
    his life and their life-affirming relationship.

    The theatre had originally planned to stage an Armenian-language
    version of the play to run in repertory with the English version but
    was not able to for various logistical reasons It would have been
    interesting to see that interpretation and how Stepanian might have
    utilized culturally-specific archetypes that have particular
    resonance for an Armenian audience.

    Luna Playhouse's artistic mission is not, however, limited by genre,
    language or culture. "We don't look at our audience as just an
    Armenian audience," said Stepanian. "Yes, we do Saroyan, but we also
    do [contemporary British playwright, Harold] Pinter and others."

    "Why?" I asked.

    "We do it primarily because the artists involved are interested in
    it."

    I applaud the Luna Playhouse leadership for presenting great plays
    >From many cultures and for offering its audience theatre that speaks
    to universal experience - whether the playwright is from Norway,
    England, Armenia or the U.S. Great drama exists to explore all
    aspects of the human experience: love, death, war, identity, family,
    class, gender, repression, freedom - most cultures and communities have
    experience with such issues, and each of them has a lot to teach and
    learn from the others.

    I asked Stepanian what he thought A Doll House was ultimately about.
    He answered by referring to an exchange between Nora and her husband
    in the final scene of the play: "I think it's about her [Nora's]
    line, `I must learn about the world.' The important realization for
    her is `I have to figure out what the world is about.' "

    He added, "She sees her own problem and she wants to change - which is
    a universal problem for everyone."


    All Rights Reserved: Critics' Forum, 2008. Exclusive to the Armenian
    Reporter.

    Lori Yeghiayan holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in Theater from the
    University of California, San Diego and has worked as a professional
    actress in television, radio, film and theatre.

    You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum
    at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
    in this series are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To sign
    up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
    www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics' Forum is a group created to
    discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.
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