The Happiest Medium

Frogs – Ambitious, Auspicious And Amphibious

by Karen Tortora-Lee on November 19, 2011

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Fault Line Theatre’s new production of Frogs - the Ancient Greek play written by Aristophanes – is reminiscent of Cupcake Wars.  Wait… stay with me here – I promise this will make sense in a second.  So, Cupcake Wars is all about taking the basic ingredients and saying “There … there you go.  You all have the same items.  Now go create something magical and wonderful that I would never have expected from this.  And make it radically different from the guy standing next to you”.   That’s the challenge of taking a play written in 405 BC and making it both exciting, relevant and modern while still keeping the time-honored tenets in tact.   Director Aaron Rossini and company not only succeed in creating something magical and wonderful, they excel.

The plot itself isn’t very complicated;  it begins with Dionysus (Haas Regen) and his devoted – if overtaxed – servant Xanthias (Blake Segal) hatching a scheme which involves Dionysus pretending to be his half-brother Heracles (Matt Clevy) in order to gain safe passage to Hades to bring Euripides (Craig Wesley Divino) back from the land of the dead. So, think Crosby and Hope in “Road to Hades” where the goal isn’t so much to get the girl in the end as it is to get the dazzling poet who (one hopes) will come back topside and make everything right because if there’s one thing everyone knows … the only way to stop civil unrest is with a poet.

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