Tag Archives: Volpone

RED BULL THEATER: VOLPONE, or THE FOX

Who: Red Bull Theater company
What: Livestreamed benefit reading of Ben Jonson’s Volpone, or The Fox
Where: Red Bull Theater website and Facebook Live
When: Monday, June 14, free with RSVP (donations accepted), 7:30 (available on demand through June 18 at 7:00)
Why: In December 2012, Red Bull Theater presented a stellar version of Ben Jonson’s classic 1606 English Renaissance satire, Volpone, or The Fox, at the Lucille Lortel Theater, which I called “a deliriously entertaining streamlined version . . . a frenetic farce fraught with fanciful flourishes.” Red Bull is bringing the play back for a live benefit reading on June 14 at 7:30, starring Grammy, Emmy, and Tony winner André De Shields as the title character and Hamish Linklater as Mosca, with Peter Francis James, Roberta Maxwell, Kristine Nielsen, Mary Testa, Jordan Boatman, Sofia Cheyenne, Franchelle Stewart Dorn, Clifton Duncan, Amy Jo Jackson, and Sam Morales. The reading, which will be available on demand through June 18 at 7:00, is directed by Jesse Berger, who explains, “Human greed and con artists appear to be timeless parts of human nature – damnable in life, but hilarious onstage! We had so much fun with this delicious satire in our 2012 production, and I am excited to share the material again in this new way with a wholly new stellar cast of great comic actors. Plus there’ll be fun new nips, tucks, and comic wrinkles by the brilliant Jeffrey Hatcher and some design surprises and delights from our terrific creative team. Oh – this and all of Red Bull’s online events are performed live. Nothing is prerecorded – And just like with live theater: Anything can happen. With this hilarious cast, I think that’s truer than ever.” The visual design is by John Arnone, with costumes by Rodrigo Muñoz (based on original designs by Clint Ramos), original music and sound by Scott Killian, and props by Faye Armon-Troncoso.

On June 17 at 7:30, Berger, members of the company, and scholar Jean E. Howard will participate in a live Bull Session discussion. “The play opens with the main character, Volpone, making a rapturous speech to his gold. Nearly every other character is also in thrall to this ‘dumb god,’ and to attain more and more wealth these Venetians are ready to prostitute their wives, disinherit their sons and defile their honor. The action of Volpone exposes and satirizes the actions of its avaricious characters, but it does so with dazzling ingenuity. The play is dominated by a magnificent con artist, Volpone, and his tricky servant Mosca. Together they dupe the well-off doctors, lawyers, and merchants of Venice into giving rich gifts to Volpone, who pretends to be near death, in the hope that one of them can become his heir,” Howard notes. “Volpone, more perhaps than any other Jonsonian comedy, takes risks in its concluding scenes, stretching comedy to its limit as the tricksters dangerously overreach themselves and slam up against the harsh strictures of Venetian law.”

VOLPONE

Stephen Spinella has a blast as the title character in streamlined revival of Ben Jonson’s VOLPONE (photo by Carol Rosegg)

Red Bull Theater at the Lucille Lortel Theater
121 Christopher St. between Bleecker & Hudson Sts.
Tuesday – Sunday through December 23, $20-$75
212-352-3101
www.redbulltheater.com

Ben Jonson’s classic 1606 English Renaissance satire, Volpone, is currently enjoying its first major New York City revival in half a century, in a deliriously entertaining streamlined version at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. The Red Bull Theater production, directed with a playful hand by Jesse Berger, stars two-time Tony winner Stephen Spinella (Angels in America) as Volpone, a Venice magnifico who takes great delight in duping various local patrons out of their extensive wealth. “Open the shrine, that I may see my saint. . . . Hail the world’s soul, and mine,” he declares upon waking, referring to his treasure chests of gold. He requests a serenade by his trio of oddball servants, eunuch Castrone (Sean Patrick Doyle), fool Androgyno (Alexander Sovronsky), and dwarf Nano (Teale Sperling), who put on a fabulous little performance for their master, with the help of offstage musicians and ensemble members Jen Eden and Pearl Rhein. Pretending to be dying of a variety of awful illnesses, Volpone is visited by a series of greedy elitists who bring him expensive gifts in the hopes of becoming his sole heir and inheriting his vast riches. The parade of men and women who feign caring about him while actually praying for his impending death include Corbaccio (Alvin Epstein), a nearly deaf old man willing to cut his son, Bonario (Gregory Wooddell), out of his will in favor of Volpone; Corvino (Michael Mastro), a wealthy merchant contemplating pimping out his virtuous wife, Celia (Christina Pumariega), in order to be named as Volpone’s heir; Voltore (Rocco Sisto), a buffoonish lawyer who can’t wait for Volpone to kick the bucket; and the elegant Lady Would-Be (four-time Tony nominee Tovah Feldshuh), who uses her feminine wiles to go after the prize. Orchestrating the mad goings-on is Volpone’s right-hand parasite, Mosca (Cameron Folmar), who relishes his role as the one who casts out the bait and reels in the catch. But when Volpone goes too far, he and Mosca have to come up with a new plan or face potential ruination.

The supposedly impending death of a wealthy Venetian sets many wheels in motion in classic English comedy (photo by Carol Rosegg)

Considered one of the greatest non-Shakespearean Jacobean comedies, Volpone is a frenetic farce fraught with fanciful flourishes. Jonson has fun with the details, beginning with the characters’ names, which reveal their inner nature; Volpone means fox, Corbaccio raven, Corvino crow, Voltore vulture, and Mosca fly. He skewers English society, leaving no one unscathed, including Volpone and Mosca and the courts. Spinella has a ball playing the sly fox, addressing the audience directly as he dupes his callers with relish, but Folmar nearly steals the show as his oft-improvising servant. Trimmed down to a lean two hours from its original four, Volpone also features several raunchy musical numbers by Scott Killian and wonderful costumes by Clint Ramos that further reflect the characters’ true selves. Things threaten to get a little too crazy in the second act, but Berger steadies the ship for a grand finale. Jonson works all seven deadly sins into his tale, which still feels relevant in today’s money-hungry world, where so many are willing to do whatever it takes for wealth and power.