Off-Broadway Review: MEDEA: RE-VERSED (Red Bull Theater and Bedlam at The Sheen Center Shiner Theatre)

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by Paola Bellu on September 23, 2024

in Theater-New York

SOMETIMES THINGS HAVE TO GET VERSE TO GET BETTER

Medea: Re-Versed, a Hip Hopera by  Luis Quintero, has landed at the Frank Shiner Theatre  and  it  is, without doubt, a memorable experience. Old-school hip hop, the one used for social commentary  in the early 80s,  is the beat throughout the piece — familiar-sounding music created by Quintero to smoothly deliver his poetry.  This  is a straightforward play without fluff or lengthy over-explaining  in search of a right answer. Medea was written by Euripides to remind us that chaos lurks in our world and there  is no answer.

Sarin Monae West

A three-piece band was playing when  I  arrived; beat-boxer  Mark Martin  was upstage-center, dressed  in a quintessential hip hop DJ outfit enriched with golden Greek trims and motifs (uncomplicated but powerful costumes by  Nicole Wee), with two actress-musicians on each side, Siena D’addario  on guitar and  Melissa Mahoney on bass, cool and unbothered. The play starts and we find out that Quintero, who was standing the whole time off stage welcoming the public in an unassuming way — so much so that I thought he was a stage hand — is the chorus leader and Emcee of the play.

Stephen Michael Spencer, Luis Quintero, and Jacob Ming-Trent

He reminds us that Medea is a Georgian princess who is the daughter of Aeëtes, king of Colchis, an ancient region at the end of the Black Sea, granddaughter of Helios (the Sun God), and niece of powerful Circe and Pasiphaë, yet she gets no respect from men, including her husband. When  Jason and his Argonauts arrived  in Colchis looking for the Golden Fleece, young Medea fell  in love with him, losing her mind and doing the unthinkable, like young lovers often do.  In order to help him with his quest, she had to go against her father and use magic to  betray her country.  If that wasn’t enough, during the escape, she had to kill her brother and the unthinkable became an unbearable tragedy. “My lady went out dispersing his remains/ got married to Jason and then sailed away/ she had cured the curse of her chest in pain.” Forced to leave her homeland for Corinth, Greece, you would think Jason worshipped her after what she had done for him but ten years into the marriage, and the birth of two young sons, he  is having second thoughts, and that  is where the prologue ends and action starts.

Sarin Monae West, Stephen Michael Spencer, Luis Quintero, Jacob Ming-Trent

Jason  is more a smug child than a villain here, a very unsympathetic character that Stephen Michael Spencer sometimes overplays. Jason wants to abandon Medea to wed Creon’s daughter, a young teen, so he can elevate his station. Creon, King of Corinth (a dazzling Jacob Ming-Trent, who also plays King Ageus [sic] and the Messenger) doesn’t care; he is an autocrat and Medea, to him, can be banished because she  is not a Greek but an  immigrant, even  if she has been living  in the city for 10 years, and a murderess, even  if she has killed to save her husband. Medea, at the time, was what we now call a refugee.

Stephen Michael Spencer, Jacob Ming-Trent, Sarin Monae West, Mark Martin

Sarin Monae West’s fills the stage with a fiery physicality for her great entrance as Medea, embodying her complex character as Euripides defined her, weighed down by conflicting thoughts. West plays her multifaceted character flawlessly throughout, turning ice-cold, furious, bitter, or broken  in a second.  In Battle Rap style, she challenges Jason, Creon, and Ageus, never missing a beat. We end up understanding Medea’s insane logic because of West’s powerful performance.

Stephen Michael Spencer and Sarin Monae West

A world premiere produced by  Red Bull Theater, co-produced by  Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival, co-conceived and directed by  Nathan Winkelstein,  Medea: Re-Versed  is anything but didactic or boring. Both Matt Otto‘s sound design and beatboxer Mark Martin‘s music direction are tight, but the scenery by Emmie Finckel  and lighting by  Cha See  are sacrificed by the size of the venue and could definitely use more creativity, although both artists did the best with what they had. This play definitely deserves a larger theater.

Medea is not just a scorned woman who sacrificed her children to feed her revenge; her story has challenged our  imagination, our deepest fears, for almost 2500 years. Quintero, with self-confidence and savoir faire, makes it simple but singular, emphasizing the human tragedy. After experiencing two goddesses, West and Medea, I am sure you will walk away singing “My dear Medea dea.

Sarin Monae West, Jacob Ming-Trent front) and Mark Martin

photos by Carol Rosegg

Sarin Monae West

Medea: Re-Versed
Red Bull Theater and Bedlam
a co-production with  Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival
ends on October 13, 2024
The Sheen Center Shiner Theatre, 8 Bleecker Street
for tickets, visit  Red Bull Theater

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