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Tag: The Da Vinci Code

  • Alley Theatre Puts Together a Sleek Da Vinci Code

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    Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code is one of the bestselling books of all time, so successful that Hollywood brought it to the big screen with A-lister Tom Hanks. If you’ve read it, or seen the movie, you probably wouldn’t think a stage adaptation inevitable, but that’s what Rachel Wagsstaff and Duncan Abel did, adapting it as a play that you can catch now over at the Alley Theatre.


    Based on its enduring popularity, there’s clearly something in there that resonates with folks. The question is, how well does that something translate to the stage?


    Our not quite intrepid hero here is Robert Langdon, a Harvard symbologist in Paris for a conference. He is, unexpectedly, called to the Louvre, where a detective, Bezu Fache, shows him the body of curator Jacques Saunière, shot dead and lying starfished on the marble floor. Prior to his death, Saunière drew a pentacle with his own blood and, ostensibly, Fache has called on Langdon to get some insight into the meaning of the symbol.


    Though Langdon quickly explains the symbol and deduces that Saunière has positioned himself as Leonardo da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man,” thereby making himself a symbol, his expertise isn’t the only reason Fache called him. It turns out that Saunière and Langdon were supposed to meet that night, though Saunière cancelled at the last minute. It’s clear that Fache is suspicious of Langdon, but his investigation is interrupted by the sudden arrival of cryptographer Sophie Neveu.


    Sophie sneakily warns Langdon that he’s in danger, and when they get a little privacy, she reveals that Saunière was her estranged grandfather, and he left behind one more message Fache had yet to reveal: “PS Find Robert Langdon.”


    Fache believes the message implicates Langdon in the killing, but Sophie believes the message was for her, telling her that she needs Langdon to solve her grandfather’s murder. Together, with the police and Saunière’s fanatical killer hot on their trail, Sophie and Langdon set off to unravel a mystery hidden in plain sight that has the potential to “shake the pillars of Western civilization.”

    click to enlarge

    Chris Hutchison and Dylan Godwin in Alley Theatre’s production of The Da Vinci Code.

    Photo by Melissa Taylor

    If you were at all cognizant around the time Brown’s novel was released in 2003, you will remember the overwhelming popularity of his fast-and-loose romp through facts and history. There’s a lot going on, with the Catholic Church, Jesus Christ, Mary Magdalene, the works of Leonardo Da Vinci, the Priory of Sion, the Knights Templar, and more all coming together to make an improbable, but irresistible page-turner.  


    Wagsstaff and Abel undertook the unenviable task of adapting Brown’s novel, condensing the 454 pages of my hardcover copy into approximately two hours (including a 15-minute intermission). The result is…okay. There’s a bit too much exposition, and though the important beats are present and accounted for, we hit them at a pace that doesn’t leave much time for the characters to develop, and we skate by the puzzles (i.e., the fun part) as too often characters encounter a challenge and solve it in seconds.


    Director Rob Melrose and the design team, the real heroes of the evening, did their best to compensate for the script’s shortcomings. Melrose helms quite the cinematic production, with sound designer John Gromada, who contributes original music to the production, underscoring the show’s movie-like feel with his suspenseful score. The theatricality is heightened by Victoria Beauray Sagady’s sophisticated projections and Thom Weaver’s lighting choices, shifting from a stage filled with striking, glowing color to an unforgiving spotlight dramatically isolating a character at the drop of a hat.


    Speaking of items of clothing, Helen Huang’s costume designs are both apt (Langdon’s tweed jacket, Sophie’s sensible blue suit) and playful (the red heels Elizabeth Bunch dons as Vernet and the chain at Dylan Godwin’s belt).


    Michael Locher’s sleek and dexterous set allows fluid movement from scene to scene, easily going from the Sorbonne, with the first three rows of the audience arranged in chairs as if conference attendees (a fun touch) to the Louvre, with a marble floor and I.M. Pei’s iconic glass pyramid visible, to then a number of locations – a church, a mansion, a bathroom, a private jet, etc. There are also two eye-catchingly beautiful, towering archways put to good use throughout the show.


    The play pays short shrift to its characters, meaning that we don’t get much of an emotional connection to them until the second act, and even then, it may be more of a testament to the actors than what is actually on the page.

    click to enlarge

    Chris Hutchison and Susan Koozin in Alley Theatre’s production of The Da Vinci Code.

    Photo by Melissa Taylor

    As the “Harvard geek,” Robert Langdon, Zack Fine is unassuming and reluctant, a man who mostly seems to go along because it seems like the right thing to do. Fine and Melissa Molano, as the much more gung-ho Sophie, settle into a fun, playful banter in the second act that gives them a chance to show off a little chemistry. Molano hits the right emotional notes at the end, particularly as she encounters a remorseful, but composed Susan Koozin and an at-a-loss Victor J. Flores.


    Todd Waite is a highlight as Sir Leigh Teabing, a character of a character, who is as amusing as he is hoity, while Dylan Godwin, as Teabing’s butler, Rémy, is a stolid, but menacing presence. Also, menacing, though in a different way, is Chris Hutchison’s Silas, who is both disturbing and pitiable.


    Christopher Salazar does his best with the one-note Fache, while Michelle Elaine is able to do more with policewoman Collet (not the least of which is deliver a consistent accent).


    Rounding out the cast is Kevin Cooney, who brings gravitas to Saunière, a role that asks little and offers even less, and Elizabeth Bunch, who adds in some fun character moments in supporting roles, even if they sometimes feel like they are from a different show.


    Despite its seeming ubiquity, not everyone is familiar with The Da Vinci Code. The gasps from the audience at a certain reveal made that clear. Fans of the book won’t get that, both the Alley’s production does still offer one thing to fans and newbies alike: A real stunner of a production, so as you’re swept away in the mystery, you also get quite the view.

    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through October 19 at Alley Theatre, 615 Texas. For more information, call 713-220-5700 or visit alleytheatre.org. $36-$135.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Signs, Symbols and Biblical References: The Da Vinci Code Goes On Stage at Alley Theatre

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    The Alley Theatre knew back in July it had a winner on its hands, already adding five performances because of the high demand for The Da Vinci Code opening this week. It is, of course, based on the international bestselling book by Dan Brown and with fond audience memories of the 2006 movie starring Tom Hanks

    Zach Fine (Seascape, The Servant of Two Masters and Pictures from Home) is returning to the Alley to play Robert Langdon, the American professor of religious symbology who just happens to be in Paris when a Louvre curator Jacques Saunière is found murdered in the famous art museum. Langdon becomes the prime suspect when a message left by Saunière directs his granddaughter Sophie Neveu to find Langdon, which the police decide means he’s the culprit.

    Langdon and Neveu (Alley Resident Company member Melissa Molano ) team up, escape and seek to solve the crime in a thriller chock full of cryptic references and biblical interpretation. The trip, of course, is not without its dangers and dangerous characters. They end up not only seeking Saunière ‘s killer but in a search for the truth about Mary Magdalene. And, of course, with a title like The Da Vinci Code, Leonardo DaVinci plays a part as well.

    As anyone knows who’s read the book, author Brown covers a lot of ground in its 682 pages. How did adaptors Rachel Wagstaff and Duncan Abel wrestle that into what Fine describes as “a very brisk two-act?”?

    “The good thing about the book is that it has such good action in it so you can really go from action event to action event,” Fine says. “Some of the historical detail that Dan Brown adds in the book, you don’t get as much of that in the play.” The result, he says, goes pretty quickly.

    Describing his character, Fine says: “Intrepid,  passionate,  balanced, a truth seeker and someone who is a bit more comfortable with books than people. A deep lover of history and in particular the symbols that are important for culture and for history. The passion for the way symbols in art and literature and religion have impacted us and help us create meaning.

    “There’s some comedy in that because he’s not someone who’s comfortable in an action movie.   He’s not Indiana Jones. He  really has to step in another part of himself that he never expected to experience before. He’s an adventurer intellectually not physically.”

    Other cast members include Resident Acting Company Members Elizabeth Bunch as Vernet, Michelle Elaine as Collet, Dylan Godwin as Rémy, Chris Hutchison as Silas and Christopher Salazar as Bezu Fache. Also: Kevin Cooney as Jacques Sanuière, Victor J. Flores as Philip, Susan Koozin (Agatha Christie’s The Mirror Crack’d) as Sister Sandrine, and Todd Waite (Resident Acting Company Member Emeritus) as Sir Leigh Teabing. Alley Artistic Director Rob Melrose directs.

    Of special note: This will be Chris Hutchison’s 100th production at the Alley.

    Brown’s book was first published in spring of 2003. Asked why it continues in its many forms to interest people, Fine says: “In a simple way I think like Agatha Christie and Conan Doyle a great mystery stays with us for a long time because it pulls the audience forward.

    “He’s done a great job of pulling us into a mystery. And that mystery is specific to Leonardo Da Vinci and and Christianity. It pulls at the part of us that goes ‘I think there’s something more underneath what we call the truth.’ It pulls at some big themes and good mysteries pull us into that part of our intuition that there’s something more, but I don’t know what it is.  It does a really effective job of just drawing us in. It engages in puzzle solving and I think puzzles are just endlessly intriguing for people. There’s a sense that there’s an order to the universe at times; there’s an order behind what feels like chaos.”

    Another major factor in the book is all the places Langdon and Neveu travel in their quest. How can that be represented on the Alley stage?

    “You’re going to be thrilled by it. This production is going to be using cutting edge scenic design, projections, sound and lighting to capture these iconic locations like the Louvre and cathedrals. We’re going to move all around the world. It’s going to be a showcase for how amazing the Alley Theatre is. It will utilize  the full spectrum of resources and artists on every level. It’s going to be even better than the movie. You can quote me on that.”

    Performances are scheduled for September 19 through October 19 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays at Alley Theatre, 615 Texas. Opening night is Wednesday, September 24. For more information, call 713-220-5700 or visit alleytheatre.org.$36-$135.

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    Margaret Downing

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