Last night I was at the Bartow-Pell Mansion to watch Red Monkey Theater Group perform William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing in the ladies' parlor of the historic Bronx home.
As I learned during a tour of the museum, the Bartow-Pell Mansion was built with two nearly identical parlors, though the one designated for men was decorated with eagles, while the ladies' parlor was given cherubs instead.
Pocket doors in the walls could open up to unite both parlors into one large room, when it was needed for balls, for instance. Open space was necessary for the performance, not for the dancing (though there was some) but to provide room for the stage manager who ran sound cues.
The audience sat on three sides of the room, not on historic chairs and sofas, which had been cleared away, but on (rather nice) folding chairs. This created an intimate space for the stripped-down, 90-minute, intermission-free performance. Co-directors Tal Aviezer and Amy Frey also took on the roles of Benedick and Beatrice in the play.
I'd previously seen Aviezer as Sherlock Holmes in Red Monkey's production of The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet. Aviezer himself wrote that adaptation of the A.C. Doyle short story, which Frey directed. Clearly, they have a rapport offstage. Similarly, onstage they have tremendous chemistry as the the two bickering lovers in Much Ado. They were supported last night by some other actors I recognized from Beryl Coronet, Derek Tarson as Leonato and Ariel Francoeur as Margaret.
The production also uses some clever doubling. Sean Coffey, who plays the cynical villain Borachio, returns as the holy Friar Francis in the infamous non-wedding scene. Sean David Demers, who plays Borachio's vile patron Don John, later comes back as the officer Dogberry, who arrests Borachio toward the end of the play. Sadly, we never get the rest of the watch, but with a cast of only nine and only an hour and a half to perform, some cuts have to be made.
Red Monkey will be returning to the Bartow-Pell for a special Dungeons & Dragons fundraiser, and then again for a one-man version of A Christmas Carol that I previously saw Coffey perform at the Van Cortlandt House Museum.
You don't have to wait until December to see the company, though. Much Ado About Nothing continues to play at Bartow-Pell until June 7th, and then will be running at Wildcliff in New Rochelle until June 28th.






