‘Crucible’ pays tribute to Miller
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TOM TITUS
When Michael Ross directed Arthur Miller’s “A View From the Bridge”
at the Newport Theater Arts Center five years ago, he was
particularly impressed with the playwright’s ability to delve inside
a character’s psyche.
“One of Miller’s great strengths as a writer was his complexity of
characters,” said Ross, who is preparing another Miller play, “The
Crucible,” for an April 29 opening at the Huntington Beach Playhouse.
“Although Miller’s impetus in writing ‘The Crucible’ was based on
his outrage toward McCarthyism,” the director observed, “I believe
the longevity of the play is due to Miller’s eloquence in depicting
how intolerance and hysteria can rip a community apart.”
“There is a cast of 23 in ‘The Crucible,’ and all of us are
totally committed to bringing Miller’s play to life,” Ross declared.
Heading that cast are Anthony Cohen as the farmer John Proctor,
caught up in the witch hunt that spreads throughout Salem, Mass., in
the late 16th century, and Lori White as his wife, Elizabeth, facing
charges of witchcraft. Valorie Curry portrays the young maid who
comes between them and launches the religious fervor against her
rival.
Lewis P. Leighton will enact the “Joe McCarthy” figure of Deputy
Gov. Danforth, who presides at the local inquisition. Nick Cook and
Ed Dyer are clergymen caught up in the storm, while Melissa Donn is
the young girl whose accounts of “demonic possession” fuel the
emotional flames.
“The Crucible,” written in the early 1950s at the height of the
Army-McCarthy Communist-hunting hysteria, focuses on the dangers of
near-totalitarian powers vested in an agency of authority, whether it
be a New England village of over 400 years ago or the United States
Congress.
“Arthur Miller and my father died within six days of one another,”
Ross noted. “Even though their politics could not be more dissimilar,
both Miller and my father believed in not compromising one’s beliefs
and one’s ideals to the dictates of society.
“We are dedicating this production of ‘The Crucible’ to both
Arthur Miller and my dad.”
“The Crucible” will be presented from April 29 to May 15 in the
Library Theater at the Huntington Beach Central Library, 7111 Talbert
Ave. Performances will be given Thursdays and Fridays at 8 p.m.,
Saturdays at 3 and 8 p.m., and Sundays at 2 and 7 p.m. Call (714)
375-0696 for ticket information.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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