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EquusThe Women
by Peter Shaffer
Directed by Kim McCann

Performance Dates
September 24 - October 17, 2004

Synopsis
A 17 year-old boy, Alan, is brought to a psychiatric hospital because he has blinded several horses with a hoof pick. A psychiatrist, Dysart, works to "normalize" the boy, all the while feeling that though he makes the boy 'safe' for society, he is taking away from him his worship and sexual vitality--both of which are missing in the doctor's own personal life. He actually envies Alan the sexual worship he has experienced.

In spite of his own hang-ups, though, the doctor does help the boy work through his obsession, which identifies the horse Equus with God. But the doctor comments that "when Equus leaves--if he leaves at all--it will be with your intestines in his teeth. . . . I'll give him [Alan] the good Normal world . . . and give him Normal places for his ecstasy. . . Passion, you see, can be destroyed by a doctor. It cannot be created."

This play explores questions about what is Normal and to what extent society will go to normalize people (or to lock them away somewhere if they can't be normalized). The role of the psychiatrist in this process both challenges and depresses Dr. Dysart, who hates the losses such normalization necessarily requires, and finds himself envying the passionate obsessions of his patient. The play is built wonderfully around symbolic use of masks and staging.

Cast  
Dr. Martin Dysart Rodrigo H. Breton &
K. Crom Saunders
Alan Strang Evan Johnson
Nurse Lenore Justman
Hester Salomon Nina Breton
Frank Strang Ted Ridgeway
Dora Strang Lauren Thomas
Horseman/Nugget Kevin Poole
Dalton James Charlesworth
Jill Mason Sarah Rowland
Horses

Patrick M. Briggs
Mari Carson
JJ Charlesworth
Nathan Fleshman
Midori Iwata
Jennifer Lam

   
Crew  
Director Kim McCann
Movement Christine Nicholoson
Costume Design Nicole Sivell

Technical Director

Shawn Weinsheink

Set & Lighting Design
Shawn Weinsheink
Theatre Technician Steve Jones
Stage Manager Alaina Boys
Asst. Stage Manager Zero Thirteen
Light Board Operator Daniel S. Haskett
Sound Board Operator Ashley Costa
Stitchers

Faculty: Christine Nicholson
Students: Sarah Rowland
Elizabeth Todd

Set Construction Steve Jones
Nathan Fleshman
Patrick Briggs
and the students of Stagecraft
Box Office Staff Cynthia Hawes
Anita Thomas (Supervisor)
House Manager Melissa Langley
Poster/Postcard Design Nixa Schell
Publicity Luther Hanson
Photography Bruce Clarke

Reviews

Sacramento News & Review

Wild horses
Equus

By Jeff Hudson

Folks nowadays think of Amadeus when they think of playwright Peter Shaffer. But Shaffer wrote two great plays in the '70s--the other one being Equus . It's not done as often these days, but is by no means the lesser of the two.

For those encountering Equus for the first time, it's darker and edgier than Shaffer's other work. It covers topics ranging from probing psychiatric inquiry and mental illness to religious adoration, sexual initiation, and the mutilation of horses--all tangled up in the mind of a twitchy, ferociously intelligent yet disturbed young man barely on the edge of adulthood.

Shaffer raises the theatrical stakes by issuing very specific instructions regarding how the play should be staged. Closely observed here by director Kim McCann, the guidelines invoke ancient Greek drama, a bit of Japanese Noh theater, and ritual in general.

It's a challenging play for all involved, including the audience. It's the obverse of light entertainment and City Theatre is going out of its way to remind viewers that it's for mature audiences.

Having repeated that injunction, this is a show we highly recommend. McCann's reading of this difficult script is dead-on. Intense and never flinching, she foreshadows what is to come without letting the tension dip, even a notch.

McCann gets a strong performance from veteran Rodrigo H. Breton as Dr. Dysart, the long-winded, world-weary psychiatrist. (Breton's been at the Sacramento Theatre Company, as well as TheatreWorks, Thick Description and other Bay Area stages.)

Even more remarkable is Evan Johnson as the troubled young Alan Strang. Johnson is mercurial and tense, with beads of sweat on his forehead. He almost explodes into crescendos of action and words. This kid is into his part, and he is good. (This is the first time we can recall reviewing him, though he's worked with Lookout! Players, Lambda Players and others.)

Sarah Rowland is also very good as Jill Mason, the girl who initiates a casual relationship with Strang. Rowland is open-eyed, curious, uninhibited and (initially, at least) unafraid. Soon enough, though, her character realizes she's in treacherous waters.

The psychiatrist is actually played twice, with Crom Saunders doubling Breton throughout and delivering his lines in American Sign Language. Saunders (thin, silent, but constantly speaking through his hands) and Breton (portly and rumbly-voiced) are more like two sides of a coin than identical twins. The double casting keeps the viewer unsettled as to what's going to happen next. That uncertainty is ultimately useful, keeping you on your toes.