
12.19.08
All is right with 'All Is Calm'
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Graydon Royce
The premiere of "All Is Calm" last Christmas
season took place on a small stage in a church auditorium crammed with
folding chairs. The intimacy heightened a poignant tale of enemies celebrating
a one-day truce at Christmas, 1914, on fields rimed with blood and snow.
So successful was the show that Theatre Latté Da and the vocal group
Cantus moved into the Pantages Theatre in Minneapolis this year.
While nothing
matches the sweet charm of discovery, the show holds up extraordinarily
well -- and in some respects is stronger. Cantus' harmonies sound wonderfully
full, and director Peter Rothstein has added more staging. The actors no
longer read from music stands, and they integrate with the singers in action.
Stage fog and a lighting scheme by Marcus Dilliard capture shadow, glare
and the frosty atmospherics of a starry night.
This richer dimension fills
out the psychic space "All Is Calm" initially
carved out in us. In this rare slice of history, Christmas is tangibly
real in its effect on human hearts pitted in mean circumstances.
"All Is Calm" is
a story of tragic heroes. Fresh, young men march off to war amid patriotic
songs and pomp. Within months, their dream of returning in glory by Christmas
lay trampled in the muck of freezing trench warfare. Actor John Catron
recites the letter of one Brit who, upon seeing his chap slaughtered by
shrapnel, determines never to befriend another soldier, lest he again feel
such acute pain.
It is also a story of dreams. Imagine, says the young
officer Winston Churchill, if soldiers went on strike and demanded a
better way to solve disputes? A young soldier echoes the sentiment as
he wonders, "Could
it have happened? If we had decided to end the fighting, could we have
stopped the war?"
Above all, though, Rothstein and Cantus find the ineffable mystery of this
story: German and Allied voices take on haunting resonance, singing "Stille Nacht" on a field
normally thundering with artillery; a French opera tenor amazes comrades
by spontaneously singing "O Holy Night"; the 23rd Psalm is solemnly
recited in English and German as enemies honor their fallen; the sheer
felicity of the moment is reflected in one soldier's observation that "we
were laughing and chatting with men we were trying to shoot hours before."
These miracles are what make "All Is Calm" such a pure example
of what was meant when angels first declared, "Peace on Earth."