Through a Glass Darkly, New York, 2011 _ Ingmar Bergman

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  • 8/12/2019 Through a Glass Darkly, New York, 2011 _ Ingmar Bergman

    1/5

    3 min re

    Through a Glass Darkly Atlantic Theater Company New York 13 May 2011

    T h r o u g h a G l a s s D a r k l y

    C a r e y M u l l i g a n r e c e i v e d r a v e r e v i e w s f o r h e r r o l e a s K a r i n ; o t h e r w i s e

    t h e r e s p o n s e w a s , w e l l , h e s i t a n t .

    http://ingmarbergman.se/en/production/through-glass-darkly
  • 8/12/2019 Through a Glass Darkly, New York, 2011 _ Ingmar Bergman

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    T

    Collaborators (9)

    he New York Times' Ben Brantley wrote that Mulligan more than confirms her

    promise as one of the finest actresses of her generation. Her performance

    'convinces us that we are seeing through Karin's very skin'. He concludes: 'Such

    vision is a rare and frightening privilege afforded only by acting of the highest order.'

    Marilyn Stasio in Variety hails the actress as the performance's saving grace, citing the

    'power and passion' of her performance.

    Even Elisabeth Vincentelli of the New York Post, who literally hates the performance and

    means that Bergman is 'lucky to be dead and safe from this fiasco,' is seduced by Mulligan

    and her 'incisive stage smarts'. Vincentelli further declares that Mulligan 'has the uncanny

    ability to be simultaneously brooding and radiant, and here she shades Karin's descent into

    madness with an almost painful sympathy'.

    David Rooney of the Hollywood Reporter certifies that 'the play belongs to Mulligan's

    Karin,' and refers to her performance as 'volatile yet restrained'. Rooney disapproves

    however of Jenny Wortons adaptation and remarks that it 'stumbles in the climactic

    scene'. He continues: 'Bergman's film was part of a trilogy about loss of faith, but in this

    context, Karin's religious hysteria remains merely a vestige of her madness, stripped of

    metaphysical meaning. The attempt to explain away her illness as a hereditary condition

    fed by the family's history of denial and withheld affection seems banal.' He concludes: 'But

    even when the writing lets her down, Mulligan's haunting performance is riveting.'

    The Associated Press' Mark Kennedy writes that all the performances are superb, but

    thinks that Mulligan is 'riveting' and that she 'pours herself into the role.' In Back StageNY

    Andy Propst adds: 'Mulligan delivers a performance that is by turns warmly endearing and

    frighteningly volcanic'. Most impressed is Propst by the 'elegant simplicity and utter lack of

    artifice' in her work.

    Newsday's Linda Winer is no less convinced. 'What a performance this is,' she states and

    V i l l a g e V o i

    ' T h e C r i t e r i o n D V D h a s e x c e l l e n t s u b t i t l e s . '

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    continues: 'Mulligan has such an apparent sweetness, such an unforced girlishness about

    her that, when the demons start calling, she magnetically pulls us down the abyss with her.

    Have dimples ever looked so sad?'

    The stage design by Takeshi Kata design received mixed reviews. David Rooney in

    Hollywood Reporter found the set an: 'austerely beautiful canvas on which to plot the

    descent into madness of Karin.' The lighting of David Weiner he described as 'soft and

    shadowy, acquiring harder edges as the drama darkens'.

    Variety's Marilyn Stasio calls Kata's split-focus set 'stunning' and presents a descriptive

    exposition of it: 'On stage left, the boxed-in interior of the claustrophobic cottage. On stage

    right, an expressionistic expanse of lonely beach. And against it all, a bleached blue "sky" of

    painted planks. But the spot that draws the eye [] is the attic where Karin retreats to

    commune with the god she hears calling to her from behind the faded wallpaper.'Associated Press' Mark Kennedy on the other hand found parts of the design 'unnecessary'

    and 'clumsy'.

    When it came to the production as a whole few were really convinced. Ben Brantely in New

    York Times meant that it: 'never builds as strongly as it needs to its shattering climaxes'.

    Most critical was undoubtedly Elisabeth Vincentelli in New York Post who called Wortons

    adaptation: 'clueless about Bergman's aesthetics and themes'. Worton, she continues,'spells everything out. She replaces Bergman's silences with constant, shallow pop-

    psychological yakking'. It is telling, Vincentelli states sternly, that the name of Karin's

    younger brother has been changed from Minus to Max. Her review ends with the merciless

    conclusion: 'What a colossal missed opportunity'.

    Michael Feingold in The Village Voice unfavourably compares the theatre production with

    Bergmans film: 'Beyond Bergmans stunning sense of visual fields, theres his fascination

    with faces: Even the best actors alive, at a moderate distance from a theater audience,

    couldnt rival the close-ups that have etched Harriet Andersson, Gunnar Bjrnstrand, and

    Max von Sydow onto the worlds memory banks. Given the impossibility, Leveauxs cast

    does well. It's just that they seem to be waving at the event from a distance rather than

    living through it. The Criterion DVD has excellent subtitles.'

    by Jan Holmberg23 May 2012

    http://ingmarbergman.se/en/%2523http://ingmarbergman.se/en/collaborators/max-von-sydowhttp://ingmarbergman.se/en/collaborators/gunnar-bj%C3%B6rnstrandhttp://ingmarbergman.se/en/collaborators/harriet-andersson-0
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    S o u r c e s

    Ben Brantley, New York Times, 6 June 2011

    Michael Feingold, The Village Voice, 8 June 2011

    Mark Kennedy, AP, 7 June 2011

    Andy Propst, Back Stage NY, 6 June 2011David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 June 2011

    Marilyn Stasio, Variety, 7 JUne 2011

    Elisabeth Vincentelli, New York Post, 6 June 2011

    Linda Winer, Newsday, 6 June 2011

    Ingmar Bergman

    Jenny Worton

    David Leveaux

    Jenna Woods

    Joanne E. McInerney

    C o l l a b o r a t o r s

    , Text

    , Adaptation

    , Director

    , Master carpenter

    , Stage technician

    F a m i l y V a l u e s

    The family plays a central part in most Bergman films, but happy

    families are rare.

    U n d e r a n e m p t y , c r u e l s k y

    Bergman was, to quote a phrase, the son of a preacher man.

    U n i v e r s e

    http://ingmarbergman.se/en/universe/under-empty-cruel-skyhttp://ingmarbergman.se/en/universe/family-values
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    M o r e s t a g i n g s o f T h r o u g h a G l a s s D a r k l y

    Stiftelsen Ingmar Bergman