Personally, I hate simplistic and
minimalistic shows. This year, I
went to my old high school’s production of Our
Town, in which the students wore their school uniforms, mimed props and
utilized regular furniture they found in the shop. I was bored to tears. The props, costumes and additional
features, to me, enhance a performance and add meaning and interest to the
overall production.
However, I could see a simplistic
show working in the case of Trifles. Although I particularly wouldn’t enjoy
it, the show is simplistic by nature.
There aren’t a lot of props and the costumes could sort of be timeless
in a way, meaning a farm today could hold the same situation as to what would
happen in 1916, when the play was written.
On the other hand, I would stage the
play with props and an actual setting.
Having a box as a chair and a piece of paper as a quilt completely takes
away from the potential detail that could offer so much to the play. For example, the dirty kitchen says a
lot about how the house was kept. If you put a piece of paper as a dirty dish, you
could think it was a towel or a knife or a salt shaker. Mrs. Hale brings out a “fancy box” in
the stage directions (342). How
would we, the audience, know that the box was fancy if it was a simple white
box. The elegance and fanciness of
the box shows Mrs. Write’s appreciation, love and compassion for the bird. The quilt that Mrs. Hale is re-stitching
together was originally sewn poorly. How could we tell that the quilt was
horribly stitched if we couldn’t see that actual quilt? How horribly the quilt was stitched can
say how nervous (or tired) Mrs. Write was (169-170). The bird is especially the most necessary prop. Seeing the
dead bird would actually make us feel for Mrs. Write. The attachment to animals is much stronger than if we saw a
piece of cloth tied up in a funny way to represent the bird.
So overall, I think that making the
show minimalistic would take away from the detail that aids the motives of Mrs.
Write. We’re more sympathetic towards Mrs. Write when we realize her motive but
we can be more convinced it is her through the items surrounding the women.
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