Saturday, May 6, 2023

TRUE CRIME - REVIEW OF CASTLETON MASSIVE PRODUCTION AT CROW’S THEATRE

Reviewed by James Karas 

When you see True Crime as the title of a play, you probably expect a whodunnit production with the telling of a story based on, as the title states, true crime. Crow’s Theatre presents the Castleton Massive Production of True Crime and one expects what I just wrote.

A glance at the cast list informs you that Torquil Campbell and Chris Abraham are the Co-Creators in collaboration with Julian Brown who is also listed as Composer and Musician.

Author, please! There is no writer credited but creators can be writers as well, I suppose, but can they tell us about the basis for the creation?

What you get in True Crime is a one-actor performance by Campbell with some musical accompaniment by Julian Brown. Let me heap praise on Campbell for  his bravura solo performance that lasts for more than ninety minutes. He sings several songs but they are simply breaks in the arduous task of telling a complex and circuitous story and always keeping the audience with him. Variations in tone, volume, startling quips and use of the stage are Campbell’s trademark ways of keeping an audience’s unfailing attention. He does it superbly.

He digresses frequently with information about himself. His father was the famous Douglas Campbell of Stratford Festival and Canadian theatre  renown in general. He mentions his wife who cannot understand his obsession with the criminal that he talks about and he makes references to local theatre. In other words, he sneaks stuff into the narrative.

Torquil Campbell. Photo: Dahlia Katz

True Crime does indeed tell the story of a notorious criminal by the name of Christian Gerhartsrtsreiter. He was a master impostor using numerous aliases such as Christopher Chichester, Charles Smith and Clark Rockefeller. Yes, the Rockefellers. He has a long criminal record including first degree murder and he is in a penitentiary now and may well end his life behind bars.

The story of Gerhartsrtsreiter’s criminal life can fill volumes but Campbell and Abraham are not interested in a lineal telling of his life. Campbell tells us that he became obsessed with Gerhartsrtsreiter life and composed songs about him and wanted to or started writing a play about him and much of the monologue is about Campbell’s attempts to communicate with him including two trips to the penitentiary where the criminal resides. The play is as much about  Campbell pursuing and meeting the Criminal as it is about Gerhartsrtsreiter. Maybe.

Campbell is a man of many talents including that of a musician, a composer, a singer and a writer. He wanted to meet Gerhartsrtsreiter artist to artist. In fact, Gerhartsrtsreiter told him that  the two became partners in whatever Campbell composed. That sounds interesting if it were true. Is it?

Is there anything true about what Campbell tells us? I don’t know and Campbell makes sure that I and presumably the audience do not know. There is no danger of me breaking the rules of a whodunnit and disclosing the culprit. I really have no idea how much of what Campbell tells us is about his search for and relationship with Gerhartsrtsreiter is totally fictitious. The latter’s criminal life is well documented of course.

Most of the details of the production, at times complex, frequently entertaining, will fade quickly but Campbell’s bravura performance will stay with me.

And when it comes to whodunit, this is a resounding success. You leave the theatre clueless.

______________________

True Crime created  by Torquil Campbell and Chris Abraham in a Castleton Massive Production will run until May 7, 2023, at Streetcar/Crowsnest Theatre, 345 Carlaw Avenue, Toronto, Ontario.  http://crowstheatre.com/

James Karas is the Senior Editor - Culture of The Greek Press

1 comment: