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![]() The Belle of Amherst
![]() 'Belle' features shy poet
By Patricia L. Garcia SunLife Editor Las Cruces Sun News
From the moment Toni Marie steps on stage dressed as Emily Dickinson — from the dark brown hair to the dark brown eyes — one is transplanted into a whole new world. It’s as if Dickinson has come back to life for a day, just to give you a sneak peak into her mind, her poems and her world. It’s not hard to see why — even Marie became engulfed in her character, who she portrays as part of the Black Box Theatre’s Biography Month. “To play this character is larger than life,” Marie said. “I feel like her up there. ... When I get up there, I try to interpret what she was meaning in her poems.” The play is a close look at the poet and how she dealt with being shy and being the talk of the town (though, not necessarily the good talk of the town) because of her quirky ways. Though most of the story is historically accurate, there are parts of the play that are writer William Luce’s improvised portions of her life. And because it is simply Dickinson who stars in the show, we get a different perspective on the often misunderstood writer. The play is funny, as the sharp-tongued Dickinson comments on the people that surround her; yet the play is at times quite sad as she talks about a romance that could never be. The furniture used in the play is beautiful Victorian furniture that suits the play well, as is Dickinson’s Victorian white dress. And, because the play is part of a rotating repertory (“Doc Holliday and The Angel of Mercy” and “Painting Madame X” are also playing at the theater), some pieces may be familiar to audiences. Stage manager Nancy Cahill, though, does a good job of changing up the stage to keep audiences who see the other plays from getting bored with it. Director Ceil Herman the play works well because of its intimacy and how personal Marie makes it. Herman said the crew has even started referring to Marie as Emily. “The play is special because the actor can become invested in the it,” she said. “(Marie’s) life was changed by becoming Emily. It’s a different experience than if it were with a full cast.” Beside simply changing her demeanor, Marie does indeed become Dickinson — the naturally blue-eyed Marie wears brown contact lenses to match Dickinson’s eyes and to match a line in the play. She even dyed her hair like Dickinson’s (or what we can gather from the one existing photo of her, anyhow.) Patricia L. Garcia can be reached at pgarcia@lcsun-news.com
Channeling Emily Dickenson by Maggie Adkins It is one thing for a historical character to come to life before your eyes, but when the words of a celebrated poet of immense talent also take on new meaning, it cannot be missed.
THE GREEN ROOM: THEATER REVIEW A poet and a gunslinger No Strings Theatre Company continues Biography Month with ‘Belle’ and ‘Doc’ BY MARY GENNRICH and JEFF BARNET
THE POET In “The Belle of Amherst,” written hy William Luce, Emily Dickinson, famous American poet, comes to life not as the melancholy hermit she’s described as in English textbooks, hut rather, as an energetic and brilliant individual who simply chose a different way of living. Dickinson spent most of her life tucked away inside the home of her family and only sought out publication of her poems once in the form of correspondence with Thomas Wentworth Higginson at the Atlantic Monthly. After the dream did not reach fruition, the poet kept her writings to herself and they were not discovered until after her death. Emily Dickinson, portrayed by Toni Marie, begins the production inviting the audience to sample a cake she’s baked and to take tea in the living area of the Dickinson household. Once the confidence of the audience is gained, she proceeds to tell her story 1)y mapping out the events of’ her life from the year 1845, when she was a teenager, to the year 1886. With the precision of a surgeon, author Luce cuts Dickinson’s poetry into the poet’s reminiscings, so well, that sometimes it’s hard to tell where the poetry that is Emily begins and where it ends. If one is not well versed in Dickinson’s poetry, this may be confusing. But for those who are in the know, the utilization of the poet’s writings is a delightful gift of prose. This widely unknown version of Dickinson, brought about by two years of research on the part of the author, presents the poet as a grinning, shy girl who becomes a great student of society. She ascertains, from observing people out of a window of her home, perhaps more about the underpinnings of human nature than most do in a lifetime of’ living outside the doors of’ their homes. Besides presenting the life of a historical figure, the play does well to illustrate the dress, mannerisms and technology of the Victorian era. Marie, a three-year resident of Las Cruces and a 10-year veteran with the Aloha Performing Arts Center, delivers the part of Dickinson with passion, grace and delightful exuberance. Her moving and bold performance at times brings out gasps of surprise, deep belly laughs and sighs of mournful understanding from the audience. Director Ceil Herman did a fabulous job coaching the actress in the demanding role of such a complex character and should be applauded as well. To go to the Reservations Page, click here
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