I wrote my first advancer feature, on the return of my favorite theater company in Manila (bias!), for the Inquirer--the website version here. "A Doll's House, Part 2" runs Sept. 15-Oct. 7.
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Red Turnip is back with 'A Doll's House, Part 2'
Topper Fabregas and the cast of "Tribes" (2016).
They were on a roll. Then they vanished. Now they're back.
That's the life--so far--of Red Turnip Theater, the quintet of Rem Zamora, Cris Villonco, Jenny Jamora, Ana Abad-Santos and Topper Fabregas. At their peak, they were churning out one critically acclaimed production after another, snagging the Best Play citation for full-length non-Filipino material in Inquirer-Theater's yearend roundup for three consecutive years (for Mike Bartlett's "Cock," Moisés Kaufman's "33 Variations" and Nina Raine's "Tribes").
Pulling back
So eyebrows were raised when, after staging Jennifer Hailey's "The Nether" in March 2017, the group fell off the radar.
"We had an inkling that we were going in a direction we wanted to pull back from," says Zamora, "so we unanimously decided to hit the refresh button. [The five of us] are literally behind everything, from planning the season to counting ticket stubs. It's been a juggling act since day one."
Now, Red Turnip returns with its 10th production--"A Doll's House, Part 2," Lucas Hnath's unauthorized sequel to the 19th-century Henrik Ibsen classic about the disintegration of an unhappy marriage.
Ibsen concludes with Nora, the protagonist, leaving her husband and kids--quite the controversial ending back in the day, when feminism and women's rights were still alien notions. Hnath picks up 15 years after Ibsen, with Nora, now a celebrated author, coming home.
"Part 2" opened on Broadway last year and was Tony-nominated for Best Play. But while it seems like typical material by Turnip standards--their avowed mission, after all, has been to mount "edgy," "in-your-face" nonmusical work--it's also a sequel to a story that hasn't been staged (at least professionally) in Manila since the new millennium.
"You really don't need to know anything [about the original] to walk into this show," Villonco says. "When I saw it in New York, I was completely floored. Everything is already given in the exposition. I love that it is only 90 minutes and set in modern language."
Directorial debut
The play marks Villonco's directorial debut--the last of the Turnips to helm a production of their own. And, in a reversal of artistic roles, she's directing her uncle, renowned filmmaker Carlitos Siguion-Reyna, in his acting debut as Nora's husband Torvald.
"Torvald was the most difficult to cast," Villonco says. "At a family reunion, I saw [my uncle] and thought, 'What if?' I'm so used to him directing me, but on the first day of rehearsals, he gave something completely different that I liked but shook me a bit."
The role of Nora, which won Laurie Metcalf last year's Tony for Best Actress, will be played by Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo, in her Red Turnip debut and her second consecutive lead role in a straight play (after Repertory Philippines' "Agnes of God" last year).
"It's a role I can really sink my teeth into," says Lauchengco-Yulo, popularly regarded as Philippine musical theater's First Lady. "Nora is a character way ahead of her time--a strong, highly intelligent and very determined woman."
The show, which also features Sheila Francisco and Rachel Coates, will open in a new venue for Red Turnip--the Zobel de Ayala Recital Hall at Maybank Performing Arts Theater in Bonifacio Global City.
"Part of our 'stepping back' was scaling down the sizes of our audiences per show and going for more intimate stagings," Zamora says. "The recital hall is perfect for this."
"We knew coming in that [exclusively staging straight plays] was going to be an uphill climb," he adds. "We figured, 'if we build it, they will come.' And the audience did. The challenge is keeping them coming."
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