Reviewed by James Karas
The blurb on the website of Buddies in Bad Time Theatre about Bernard-Marie Koltes’ play Roberto Zucco reads as follows:
Witness the living
through the eyes of the dead. Roberto Zucco lures us into the wet streets and
gloomy rooms of 1980s Europe, where a charming antihero battles his cosmic urge
to kill. Written as he was dying in 1989, Koltès’ sordid swan song is Greek tragedy
kissed by Gregg Araki—breathlessly violent but with a pitch-black wit and
occasional syrupy sweetness that leaves you disarmed. Caught between the realms
of true crime and grotesque fantasy, the play shines a
blistering sun on our darkest impulses; by the end,
you’ll wonder if we’re just flightless birds in the face of our fates.
Living through the eyes of the dead, cosmic urge to kill, the play shines a blistering sun on our darkest impulses, by the end, you’ll wonder if we’re just flightless birds in the face of our fates?
Regretfully, I experienced none of the above as I tried to follow the
plot that seemed to be devoid of all of them. I am still trying to figure out who
is living through whose dead eyes, what is a cosmic urge to kill and how does a
murderer become an anti-hero, whatever that is. The rest of the blurb makes
even less sense but so be it.
The play opens on a dark stage with two actors with a microphone stand in front of them conversing about what they are seeing or should be looking at. They are prison guards and tell us that escaping from their prison is all but impossible. But they notice someone on the roof doing just that. The fugitive murdered his father and after escaping visits his mother and murders her too. By the end of the 100 minutes or so he murders a child and a police officer. He must have a really bad case of the cosmic urge.
Fiona Highet and Jakob Ehman in “Roberto Zucco”
Photo by Jeremy Mimnagh
The play has 21 characters acted by seven actors, Jakob Ehman, Samantha Brown, Fiona Highet, Daniel MacIvor, Kwaku Okyere, and Oyin Oladejo. The program does not give us any details about who plays what role in the play’s fifteen scenes. Most of the scenes are short and the dialogues, the philosophizing and the situations are mostly brief and as becomes Koltes’ attitude are removed from the logic we may expect from human beings.
Koltes wrote the play in 1989, moths before he died of an AIDS-related disease. The character of Zuccaro is based on a real serial killer that Koltes molded into his world view.
The set consisted of a gray wall
with a roof at the back that came crashing after Zuccaro escaped. A well-lit
table and chairs were the scene for two women talking, a simple bench for the
scene with the elegant woman and rooms for other scenes.
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Roberto Zucco by Bernard-Marie Koltes played until October 5 2024 at the Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, 12 Alexander Street, Toronto, Ontario. www.buddiesinbadtimes.com
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