‘Memnon’: Harlem comes to Malibu (ancient Black Lives Matter too)
Eric Berryman as Memnon and Jesse Corbin as Achilles in the foreground, with Jesse J. Perez as Nestor and Andrea Patterson as Helen in the background. | Craig Schwartz

MALIBU, Calif. — For the first time in the 18-year history of Getty Villa’s Outdoor Classical Theater productions staging ancient Greek and Roman theater the Classical Theatre of Harlem has crossed the continent to present a play at the Malibu Amphitheater. As CTH is a theatre company that specializes in stories told through the lens of the African diaspora, the title character of Memnon is from Ethiopia (and not to be confused with Agamemnon, the tragic king featured in Aeschylus’ Oresteia).

Although he was mentioned in Homer’s ca. 2,800-year-old saga The Iliad, and was the central figure in the Aethiopis, an epic poem normally attributed to Arctinus of Miletus, which is largely lost, Memnon has been largely forgotten. Not so the other leading characters: Helen of Troy (the curvaceous Andrea Patterson, an Obie Award winner and Drama Desk Award nominee), Hector (an offstage presence), and Achilles (the muscular Jesse Corbin, who appeared in a musical version of From Here to Eternity based on James Jones’ novel with lyrics by Tim Rice), whose battle with the eponymous Ethiopian is the grand finale of this play.

Now playwright Will Power and the CTH team are restoring Memnon (the majestic Eric Berryman, who previously performed at the Getty Villa in The Persians and The Bacchae) to his rightful place in the mythos of the Trojan War with this new play named after the Ethiopian king. Helmed by Carl Cofield, with costumes by Celeste Jennings, sets (which include mobile scaffolds and cots) by Riw Rakkulchon, music (taped, not played live, alas) composed by David R. Molina and movement choreographed by Tiffany Rea-Fisher (of EMERGE125, who also serves as associate director), this production set around the 7th century BCE actually has a Mad Max type vibe. There isn’t a toga in sight, although high-top sneakers or boots and other contemporary accouterments and adornments abound, along with period touches, such as Memnon’s shield. (Getty Villa’s café is offering a Memnon-inspired menu, including an alcoholic concoction called “The Glorious Shield.”

The approximately 80-minute one-act play can be a bit talky with lengthy monologues or soliloquies, although I imagine this may be how some Greek dramas were presented in those ancient amphitheaters under the starry Grecian skies many moons ago. Juilliard graduate Jesse. J. Perez recites some of these longwinded speeches in a double role as Priam, King of Troy (who beseeches Memnon to leave Ethiopia and come to the Trojans’ aid in their moment of need, as they are besieged by the Greeks) and as the elderly monarch Nestor. In the latter part, Perez is comical and reminded me of Cheech Marin in his droll delivery. Santo Domingo-born Daniel José Molina is also prone to speechifying and cast in a dual role, as Polydamus and Antilochus.

The cast’s standout is arguably Andrea Patterson, who, as Helen, has the only major female role (the three dancers in the choreo Greek chorus are also women, Holly Hwang Belshaw, Katherine Files, and Jenna Kulacz). Mythologically speaking, this rare beauty is the “cause of it all,” the war between the Greeks and Trojans. But refreshingly, Will Power has given Helen of Troy a 21st-century feminist slant. In a scene with Memnon, Helen insists that it wasn’t her fault that in patriarchal Sparta she was forced into an arranged marriage with Menelaus and that Paris of Troy absconded with her—presumably because of her astonishing beauty—fleeing Greece for Turkey, and thus triggering a bitter decade-long war. Helen’s lament reminded me of when rape victims are held responsible for their assaults because they wore “provocative” clothing—that old “blame the victim” chauvinism that passes the buck, seeking to evade accountability.

Memnon all leads up to the final conflict, the Armageddon of Memnon versus Achilles, which is well staged and choreographed (Molina also has a “fight captain” credit). Throughout the play, Memnon—who earlier in his life had been scorned by the Trojans now begging for him to rescue them—has shown himself to be philosophical and reluctant about committing himself and his African army to the cause of Troy. A rather ethereal Ethiopian, let’s just say without spoiling the plot that Memnon would have been far better off if he had simply stayed home instead of embarking on this foolhardy, fateful odyssey from the Horn of Africa to Turkey. Even in 700 or 800 BCE, from Troy to Gaza, war is still hell, and the quest for “glory” is the ultimate folly, a grand illusion.

By putting the character of Memnon back in the spotlight alongside his Turkish (Trojan) and Greek counterparts and rescuing him from mythic obscurity, the Classical Theatre of Harlem is proving that throughout the eons, from Sparta to Troy to Harlem to Malibu and beyond, Black Lives Matter, yesterday and today. And in setting the record straight, they have concocted a stirring drama about misplaced heroism and loyalty that is an enlightening experience to be enjoyed out-of-doors at the Roman-style Getty Villa’s amphitheater. Well worth strapping your sandals on and mountin’ your Trojan horse to drive down to the ’Bu for.

Memnon takes place at 8:00 p.m. on Thurs., Fri., and Sat. through Sept. 28 at the Getty Villa’s Outdoor Classical Theater, 17985 Pacific Coast Hwy., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272. For information and tickets call (310) 440-7300 or go to the Getty website.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Ed Rampell
Ed Rampell

Ed Rampell is an LA-based film historian and critic, author of "Progressive Hollywood: A People’s Film History of the United States," and co-author of "The Hawaii Movie and Television Book." He has written for Variety, Television Quarterly, Cineaste, New Times L.A., and other publications. Rampell lived in Tahiti, Samoa, Hawaii, and Micronesia, reporting on the nuclear-free and independent Pacific and Hawaiian Sovereignty movements.

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