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by
George W Hayden
MARION
- Walt Whitman comes to M.A.C.
A
serenely acted one-man show Unlaunched Voices starring Shakespearean
actor Stephen Collins hosted by the indefatigable producer
Wendy Bidstrup proved a meticulously mounted showcase. The
Marion Art C enter, like a miniature Ford Theatre (Washington,
D.C.) with its 19th century portraits and one balcony box seat
was a most appropriate ambiance for Collins’ noteworthy revitalization
of one of our nation’s greatest war-time genre poets.
The
effect of this set is to make the audience feel as though they
are visiting the house museum of a famous writer. However,
museums are always tidied up. This room looks as though the
writer lived there and was just about to step through the door.
And in the play, of course, he does.
In
his lively introduction as Whitman to his audience I believe
Collins singled out this reviewer as an “old elephant.” His
tone set a captivating and educationally refreshing familiarization
with this great creator of free verse. Leaves of Grass (self-published,
1855).
As
a journalist, Whitman wrote for the long-defunct Brooklyn Eagle
and Long Island Democrat Collins presents an intimate study,
yet shies away from the symphonic and flamboyant side and nature
of Whitman. His Concord letter from Ralph Waldo Emerson is
an effective dramatic device which allows his to show how these
visionary precursors of spiritualism and transcendentalism
kept through correspondence an unified contact with each other
long before the computer. He successfully refutes with Whitman’s
own writings those critics who blackballed this apostle as
obscene, and in the one hour plus presentation given at M.A.C.
there was some deletion from the homo-erotic specifically in
the battlefield poems and letters Whitman wrote while serving
as a male nurse during the Civil War.
This
is a most healthy, soulful celebration of the human body, wherein “sex
advances the horizons of discovery.” Whitman said “censorship
is always bad, always ignorant,” and that “animals were not
demented with the mania of owning things.“
Americans
ignored Whitman’s work, while Europeans embraced him. He lived
in poverty all his life and was judged to have been unsavory
by his detractors. About war he wrote, “I’m at peace with God
and death.”
Collins’ performance
can be booked for schools and colleges, etc. Its a literate
and refreshing approach. He has played in the poet’s hometown
area, Huntington, Long Island, and will be at Brattleboro Vermont
in October. His Whitman will tantalize and reveal much. “Out
of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking.” He can be reached at 27 Davis
Court, Concord 01742.
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