
Recommended *** If Gaston Leroux’s novel, Phantom of the Opera, were set in a more pedestrian context within the city of Chicago, it would have to take place at “The Athenaeum Theatre.” The building is now over a hundred years old, and is the longest continuous running off-loop theatre. It has five performing spaces, including an elegant theatre that seats nearly 1,000 people, and many mysterious hallways and rooms that no longer appear to be in constant use. The theatre’s eeriness alone is well worth a trip. I attended “Owners” by British playwright Caryl Churchill in one the smaller studio theatres, but on a stage which, because it revolved, proved very flexible for a play which is set in four different places.
Near the beginning, when Worsley first pays a visit to Lisa, she is frantic expecting another baby, but Alec is stuck in a Zen-like and does not seem to care. At least, we are to assume it is Zen-like from the Zen epigram that Churchill includes in her script and which appears in our program. Likewise, I assume that Marion’s ruthless pursuit of material wealth and worldly success is supposed to be attributed to her Christian background when she exclaims “Onward, Christian soldiers, marching as if to war” (also included as an epigram to the play) and asks “Doesn’t evolution say the same thing?” Personally, I’ve never found Western and Eastern theology to be so diametrically opposed. Compassion, not indifference, to the suffering of others set The Buddha on the path to Enlightenment, and there are certain Western sacred text, such as The Hebrew Bible, The New Testament, and The Holy Qur’an, that condemn the pursuit of material and worldly success, especially when in it is obtained at the expense of others. Nor do I understand what Ms. Churchill is trying to say about gender. Marion, the successful and independent woman, is neither sympathetic, nor moral (almost all the successful and independent women I know are) while Lisa, who yearns for a life based in more traditional gender roles, is both, at least more so than Marion, and Clegg’s character is simply ridiculous. I know some very misogynist men, but none of them would openly admit that they see the obligations within context of a traditional Christian, and yes patriarchal, marriage, as a one-way street (Even if that is how they almost always behave). Nor would any of them kill a dog that adored them for momentary disobedience, and find such satisfaction in it that they would ask their suicidal friend to kill their wife.
Ultimately, this play doesn’t tell us much about the human condition, gender issues, or economic inequity, despite its attempts, but it is a great production, a good and fun, comic story, and in some ways, a convincing representation of 1970’s East London.
The Interrobang Theatre Project is producing “Owners” at The Athenaeum Theatre located at 2936 N. Southport Avenue. It is showing through November 4 with productions Thursday through Saturdays at 7:30 pm and Sunday’s at 2:00 pm. Regular Tickets are $15 while Student and Senior Tickets are $10, and can purchased by calling the box office at 312-902-1500 or, for a $2 registration fee, at https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pe.c/9914104
To see what others are saying, visit www.theatreinchicago.com, go to Review Round-up and click at “Owners”.
Photo: by-EmilySchwartz