Nice Fish is a 2013 play by Mark Rylance, co-written with Louis Jenkins and adapted from poems by the latter. It received its world premiere production at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, opening on April 6, 2013, and running through May 18, 2013..[1] The original production was directed by Rylance and Claire van Kampen (who also contributed original music) and featured Rylance as Ron as well as actors Jim Lichtscheidl as Eric, Emily Swallow as Flo and Chris Carlson as Wayne. The cast also included Bob Davis as DNR Officer and Tyson Forbes as Wainwright.
Nice Fish | |
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Written by | Mark Rylance, Louis Jenkins |
Date premiered | 6 April 2013 |
Place premiered | Guthrie Theater |
Original language | English |
Genre | Comedy |
The genesis of the play was revealed in a 2016 New Yorker feature:[2] "Nice Fish began with a foray on the ice. In the winter of 2008, Rylance played the title role in a production of Peer Gynt, at the Guthrie Theatre, in Minneapolis.[3] There was an interval between performances, and a few friends invited him to go ice fishing. Van Kampen went too, but the wind knocked her over. In New York, a few months later, Rylance came across Jenkins’s poems and recalled that day on the ice in Minnesota. ‘I just liked the poems tremendously,’ he said. ‘They made me laugh, but underneath there was a deep melancholy, a blue note that appealed to me.’"
After the 2013 Minneapolis premiere, Rylance decided the original 3-act version of Nice Fish needed trimming, as he said in a 2016 article: “’I added too much,’ [Rylance] conceded. The play would be more powerful, he resolved, if he shaved off the majority of his own dialogue, leaving only essential connective tissue between the poems.” [4]
A revised version of the play starring Rylance and directed by Claire van Kampen received its premiere production at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, MA on January 17, 2016, and then transferred to St. Ann's Warehouse, New York, on 14 February 2016, running until 27 March 2016.[5]
The revised version of the play was also staged at the Harold Pinter Theatre in London in November 2016[6] and ran until February 2017.[7] The London run received media attention when it was announced that four free tickets would be available at each performance to anyone who dressed up as a fisherman or fish.[8] The play was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Comedy.[9]
In the longer original 2013 version of the play three of the supporting roles reflected comic versions of characters from Richard Wagner's opera Das Rheingold, since Rylance had recently seen the opera and saw Wagner's use of Norse gods as representing various Jungian archetypes. Rylance also consulted with the Jungian psychologist James Hillman while creating the text for Nice Fish.[10] The character Flo (who pops out of a fishhouse in a bikini) was a stand-in for the goddess Freia (aka Freyja), while Flo's boyfriend Wayne and his brother Wainwright offered parody versions of Wagner's giants Fafner and Fasolt (who abduct Freia in Das Rheingold). In the shorter 2016 revised version the Wagnerian overtones were removed and the character Wainwright was cut. Flo remained a somewhat younger Freia-like figure, perhaps representing Spring or Persephone, while Wayne became Flo's grandfather, not her boyfriend, and more of an Old Man Winter figure. During the American Repertory Theater run of the play in Cambridge, MA, in January 2016, Louis Jenkins joined the cast and performed the role of Wayne.
References
edit- ^ Gillette, David Almanac Twin Cities Public Television feature on the 2013 Guthrie Theater production. May 3, 2013. [1]
- ^ Zarin, Cynthia "Mark Rylance Talks Poetry and Ice Fishing" The New Yorker Mar. 1, 2016 [2]
- ^ Gans, Andrew & Hetrick, Adam "Peer Gynt, with Mark Rylance, Begins Guthrie Run Jan. 12" Playbill Jan. 12, 2008 [3]
- ^ Firestone, Lonnie "Mark Rylance Chisels at His Midwestern Roots in ‘Nice Fish’"American Theatre Jan 14, 2016 [4]
- ^ Firestone, Lonnie "Mark Rylance Chisels at His Midwestern Roots in ‘Nice Fish’"American Theatre Jan 14, 2016 [5]
- ^ Michael Billington "Mark Rylance reels them in with kooky comedy" The Guardian Nov. 25, 2016 [6]
- ^ Longman, Will (16 September 2016). "Mark Rylance's Nice Fish extends by three weeks". Retrieved 2017-03-30.
- ^ Wiegand, Chris (8 July 2016). "Audiences invited to dress up as fish for free tickets to Mark Rylance's new play". Retrieved 2017-03-30.
- ^ "Olivier awards 2017: full list of nominations". The Guardian. 2017-03-06. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
- ^ Itzkoff, Dave "Mark Rylance Play, Written With a Favorite Poet, Is Coming to Minneapolis Theater" New York Times Apr 16, 2012 [7]