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STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is colorful, larky fun By Don Aucoin | GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 16, 2012 GRETJEN HELENE Taylor Mac as the title character in the ART production of his “The Lily’s Revenge” at Oberon. CAMBRIDGE — At the beginning of “The Lily’s Revenge,’’ a haughty figure named Time, played by Samantha Eggers with a cuckoo clock on her head and two smaller clocks on her shoulders, warns the audience that the performance they’re about to see will be “much longer than advertised. It is so long you may actually forget your name. . . . This play could very well last the rest of your life!’’ You can now read 10 articles each month for free on BostonGlobe.com. Theater & art In Taylor Mac’s larky ‘Lily’s Revenge’ at Oberon, a longing... http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/theater-art/2012/10/15... 1 of 3 4/15/14 10:41 PM

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Page 1: STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is colorful, larky funweb.mit.edu/saralb/Public/reviews2/bg_lily.pdf · 2014. 4. 16. · STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is

STAGE REVIEW

ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is colorful, larkyfunBy Don Aucoin | GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 16, 2012

GRETJEN HELENE

Taylor Mac as the title character in the ART production of his “The Lily’s Revenge” at Oberon.

CAMBRIDGE — At the beginning of “The Lily’s Revenge,’’ a haughty figure named Time,

played by Samantha Eggers with a cuckoo clock on her head and two smaller clocks on her

shoulders, warns the audience that the performance they’re about to see will be “much longer

than advertised. It is so long you may actually forget your name. . . . This play could very well

last the rest of your life!’’

You can now read 10 articles each month for free on BostonGlobe.com.

Theater & art

In Taylor Mac’s larky ‘Lily’s Revenge’ at Oberon, a longing... http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/theater-art/2012/10/15...

1 of 3 4/15/14 10:41 PM

Page 2: STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is colorful, larky funweb.mit.edu/saralb/Public/reviews2/bg_lily.pdf · 2014. 4. 16. · STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is

If truth-in-advertising regulations applied to stage dialogue, plenty of plays would begin with

similar warnings. But you’re not likely to look at your own timepiece very often during the

four hours and 20 minutes, including several intermissions, that it takes the American

Repertory Theater production of “The Lily’s Revenge’’ to unfold at Oberon. There’s too much

to see, hear, and generally absorb.

CONTINUE READING BELOW ▼

A five-act phantasmagoria written and conceived by Taylor Mac and directed with finesse by

Shira Milikowsky, “The Lily’s Revenge’’ blends satire, music, dance, verse, film, fable, and

vaudevillian hijinks into a tale of an intrepid, pure-hearted flower named Lily (Mac), battling

the forces of history, culture, and social convention in its bid to marry a human.

That might make the show sound cloying, cutesy,

and ham-handed, and in truth, sometimes it’s all

those things. More often, though, you’re caught

up in its sheer, gaudy, irrepressible theatricality.

If Busby Berkeley had dropped acid while

watching “Pee-wee’s Playhouse,’’ the result might

have been “The Lily’s Revenge.’’

In a very funny sequence just before Lily uproots itself from its baby-blue pot, Mac dons a top

hat and twirls a cane, every inch a prima donna. The flower envisions its life to come as a

showbiz fable, complete with adulatory crowds; producers and celebrities knocking on the

dressing-room door; and introspective moments in front of the makeup mirror, when the

hollowness of fame stands revealed.

For all its larky antics, an unmistakable message is woven throughout the dreamlike “Lily’s

Revenge,’’ which premiered in New York in 2009 and won an Obie Award. It comes across as

an allegory about gay marriage while making a broader argument for the simple freedom to

love who you want, be who you are, and control your own story.

For Lily, that means breaking free of “institutionalized narrative’’ and the suffocating,

pervasive force of false nostalgia for a world that never existed. These spirit-constraining

qualities are represented by The Great Longing, who proclaims that the Bride Deity, well

played by Davina Cohen, cannot marry a flower.

CONTINUE READING BELOW ▼

Embodied as a fuming, tyrannical theater curtain, The Great Longing is portrayed by none

other than Thomas Derrah, who pulls out all the stops. One of Boston’s finest actors — his

More10/12: Seeking community inTaylor Mac’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’

In Taylor Mac’s larky ‘Lily’s Revenge’ at Oberon, a longing... http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/theater-art/2012/10/15...

2 of 3 4/15/14 10:41 PM

Page 3: STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is colorful, larky funweb.mit.edu/saralb/Public/reviews2/bg_lily.pdf · 2014. 4. 16. · STAGE REVIEW ART’s ‘Lily’s Revenge’ is

© 2014 BOSTON GLOBE MEDIA PARTNERS, LLC

solo performance in the ART’s “R. Buckminster Fuller: The History (and Mystery) of the

Universe’’ was a wonder to behold — Derrah trades in Bucky’s bow tie and three-piece suit for

pasties and a G-string as he performs a protracted striptease routine that sets some kind of

record for middle-aged actor daring.

It’s not the only memorable sight. Visually, “The Lily’s Revenge’’ is a rainbow riot of color.

Somewhere, Dame Edna is seething in envy at the over-the-top garishness of Sarah Cubbage’s

costumes. Mac is attired in an iridescent green jumpsuit from which five white petals jut. In

Act 2 — the weakest part of the show — the verse-spouting Garden Flowers wear wigs and

headdresses of purple, orange, and pink, while Remo Airaldi’s Master Sunflower is adorned

with a crown of giant yellow petals. I got a close-up view when Airaldi walked to my seat and

proceeded to painstakingly lick my forehead, not once but twice, though I don’t recall asking

for an encore.

But hey, audience interaction is part of the ART aesthetic at Oberon, and very much part of

“The Lily’s Revenge,’’ even during intermission, when performers fan out through and outside

the club. Anyone venturing into the Oberon men’s room during the first break at the opening

performance would have encountered a fast-talking performer delivering a philosophical

disquisition while scribbling theories on the mirror. It’s in keeping with a show that

name-checks Hegel, Kant, Heidegger, and especially the poet and essayist Susan Stewart (a

fictional version of whom is featured in “The Lily’s Revenge,’’ portrayed by Adeola Role).

The idealized vision of marriage that animates Lily is subjected to a forceful reality check in

the third act. Wedded bliss proves not entirely blissful in a dream ballet by Ara Glenn-

Johanson, superbly performed by Marisa Fratto, as Bride Love, and Samson Kohanski, as

Groom Love. On a catwalk above the duo, Lily slows to near immobility, as if demoralized by

this spectacle of the prosaic.

It doesn’t last long. Lily doesn’t lose heart, and doesn’t allow dreary reality to maintain its

dominion, either. This flower just might be the last romantic.

Don Aucoin can be reached at [email protected].

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