Culture

SHIPWRECKED! AN ENTERTAINMENT @ International City Theatre

With Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe may have invented the genre of “realistic fiction,” wherein a fabricated author delivers his autobiography. His work may have inspired real-life Louis de Rougemont to relate the Crusoean tale he published serially in The Wide World Magazine beginning in 1898 under the title “The Adventures of Louis de Rougemont[,] As Told By Himself.” The series was a sensation, but a bit of investigative journalism put the lie to Rougemont’s incredible story, and the arc of the rest of his (real name: Henri Louis Grin) life traveled from disgrace to obscurity.

With Shipwrecked! An Entertainment—The Amazing Adventures of Louis de Rougemont (As Told By Himself), playwright Donald Margulies has brought Rougemont to the stage to recreate unlikely exploits. It’s a bit like how in the early 1880s Robert Ford went on tour with the story of how he killed Jesse James. Except that Ford’s story was true and undoubtedly far less whimsical.

Now an old man, Rougemont (Jud Williford) hobbles forward and prepares the audience to hear his life’s story, then takes on the mien of his frail childhood self, confined indoors by his overprotective mother but transported to exotic locales by her bedside readings. At 16 he leaves home in quest of adventures like those in the books that fired his imagination. He gains passage on a pearling expedition to the Coral Sea. Things get all shipwrecky, and he is stranded on a deserted island with his canine friend Bruno. Years later “aborigines” turn up, and…

If this sounds more than a little like Robinson Crusoe (full title: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner: Who lived Eight and Twenty Years, all alone in an un-inhabited Island on the Coast of America, near the Mouth of the Great River of Oroonoque; Having been cast on Shore by Shipwreck, wherein all the Men perished but himself. With An Account how he was at last as strangely deliver’d by Pyrates), and if way leads to way in Rougemont’s story with predictability, it’s neither accident nor flaw. Margulies’s play effectively plays with and on a populist style of storytelling, from the progress of the plot through to the evocation of emotions and all the way down to the economical strokes of caricature that depict the characters populating Rougemont’s supposed life. It’s neither deep nor original, and it doesn’t need to be.

What has to happen for Shipwrecked!: An Entertainment to avoid the irony of not being entertaining is what a production does with it. Margulies’s has not written a script that on its own is particularly compelling or ambitious (as opposed to what we get from Shakespeare or Stoppard). Rather, he’s built a vessel whose effectiveness as a mode of transport will be wholly determined by how a theatre company rigs it. And International City Theatre has crafted it into quite a speedy little catamaran.

As Rougemont, Jud Williford would seem to be the center of the show, and to be sure he is perfect in the role (doing a job similar to his turn as Phileas Fogg in ICT’s 2013 production of Around the World in Eighty Days), precisely enunciating every syllable and modulating Rougemont’s narrative with proper emotion at each line. But Nick Ley and Laurine Price are equal partners in the show’s success. Playing performers within a performance as Rougemont’s aides (delightfully breaking the fifth wall), each glides from character to character, as well as jumping offstage (but in plain sight) to do the necessary Foley work to evoke the many locales and atmospheres into which Shipwrecked! sails. They make their manifold and often complicated tasks seem effortless, seamlessly joining moment after moment like perfect pearls on a string. Because they execute literally every duty they’re assigned to its fullest extent, I’m reluctant to single out any particular role, but it must be said that Ley’s work as Bruno, right down to the quick respiration that is immediately recognizable as canine, would lead me to believe he has some dog in him were I a little worse in biology.

The production details are equally effective. The set, the lighting, the wardrobe, the props (love the ladder!), the sound design—all have been chosen and implemented with perfect economy. Director Luke Yankee has brought together exactly the pieces he needs to maximize Shipwrecked!, moving them around the stage like a grandmaster.

It doesn’t especially matter whether Margulies’s re-imagining of Louis de Rougemont’s fantastical autobiography tickles you as clever confabulation or feels like a pat on the head of merely serviceable storytelling. When a production has this much meticulous detail and is this perfectly assembled, it’s hard to imagine anyone’s not being completely engaged. This is an impeccable show.

SHIPWRECKED! AN ENTERTAINMENT—THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF LOUIS DE ROUGEMONT (AS TOLD BY HIMSELF) INTERNATIONAL CITY THEATRE • 300 E OCEAN BLVD • LONG BEACH 90802 • 562.436.4610 • ICTLONGBEACH.ORG • THURS-SAT 8PM, SUN 2PM • $25-$49 • THROUGH NOVEMBER 6

(Photo credit: Tracey Roman)

Greggory Moore

Trapped within the ironic predicament of wanting to know everything (more or less) while believing it may not be possible really to know anything at all. Greggory Moore is nonetheless dedicated to a life of study, be it of books, people, nature, or that slippery phenomenon we call the self. And from time to time he feels impelled to write a little something. He lives in a historic landmark downtown and holds down a variety of word-related jobs. His work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the OC Weekly, The District Weekly, the Long Beach Post, Daily Kos, and GreaterLongBeach.com. His first novel, THE USE OF REGRET, was published in 2011, and he is deep at work on the next. For more: greggorymoore.com.

Recent Posts

City Attorney, County, and Cities Nationwide Oppose LA National Guard Deployment in Amicus Brief

The multicity amicus brief lays out the arguments for why the federalization of the National…

15 hours ago

‘Trump Traffic Jam’: Republicans Slash Popular Clean Air Carpool Lane Program

Over the last 50 years, the state’s clean air efforts have saved $250 billion in…

15 hours ago

Update: Unified Command Continues Response to Fallen Containers at the Port of Long Beach

Unified command agencies have dispatched numerous vessels and aircraft to assess the situation and provide…

17 hours ago

Last-minute intervention needed to save Long Beach low-waste market

Since February 2022, Ethikli Sustainable Market has made it easy to buy vegan, ethically sourced,…

2 days ago

After Statewide Action, AG Bonta Sues L.A. County, Sheriff’s Department

John Horton was murdered in Men’s Central Jail in 2009 at the age of 22—one…

2 days ago

Representatives Press FEMA to Preserve Emergency Alert Lifeline

The demand for this program has far outstripped available funds, further underlining the significance of…

2 days ago