‘All the Devils Are Here’ review: Patrick Page and the Bard’s villains

‘All the Devils Are Here’ review: Patrick Page and the Bard’s villains


Thereโ€™s something refreshingly 19th century about Patrick Pageโ€™s traveling Shakespeare seminar, โ€œAll the Devils Are Here,โ€ which opened Thursday at BroadStage in Santa Monica.

The show, a touring tutorial he created and performs solo, allows Page the opportunity to animate with barnstorming crackle a rogueโ€™s gallery of Shakespearean scoundrels. Villains come quite naturally to this stage veteran, who might not smack his lips when impersonating evil, but he certainly doesnโ€™t stint on the flamboyant color. An American Shakespearean who can hold his own with the Brits, he combines mellifluous diction with muscular imagination.

Page received a Tony nomination for his performance in the musical โ€œHadestown,โ€ in which he played Hades, ruler of the underworld, with a sexy, tyrannical malevolence and a voice so deep it resonated as darkly as Leonard Cohenโ€™s. And heโ€™s had prior success creating outlandish villains on Broadway with the Grinch and, from โ€œSpider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,โ€ Norman Osborn/Green Goblin.

But Shakespeare has long been a touchstone. Heโ€™s dedicated himself to the work, as was evident in his triumphant turn in the Shakespeare Theatre Companyโ€™s 2023 production of โ€œKing Learโ€ in Washington, D.C., directed by Simon Godwin. The producers of which had the good sense to stream worldwide for all of us outside the nationโ€™s capital who wanted to experience the thunderclap of Pageโ€™s Lear.

Godwin, the artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company and an associate director of the National Theatre in London, leaves little distance between Page and the audience in his staging of โ€œAll the Devils Are Here.โ€ The direct-address simplicity of the production serves the fluidity of Pageโ€™s performance. The actor transitions from talking about the characters to becoming them with just a shift in his posture and vocal tone.

Proximity is the point. Shakespeareโ€™s bad guys, with a few notable exceptions, are quite like you and me, which is to say they are human. Their worst deeds are the product of desires and fears that arenโ€™t foreign to any of us. We might not be capable of atrocities, but in our dreams weโ€™re all occasionally raving lunatics, giving vent to feelings we keep buried away in the light of day.

Page makes the tendentious claim that Shakespeare invented the villain, then walks it back to explain exactly what he means. His thesis is that Shakespeare early in his playwriting career followed the prevailing models of villainy. These vicious and vindictive antagonists tended to be outsiders, Jews (in the case of Christopher Marloweโ€™s โ€œThe Jew of Maltaโ€), Moors (such as Aaron the Moor in Shakespeareโ€™s โ€œTitus Andronicusโ€) or the physically deformed (most notably, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who first appeared in Shakespeareโ€™s โ€œHenry VIโ€ and proved to be such a hit that he was given his own play, โ€œRichard IIIโ€).

We get a taste of these Machiavels, who have none of the misgivings about vengeance that will plague Hamlet. Page portrays them without much introspection. They tell you what theyโ€™re going to do and then they bloody well do it. They can be scathingly ironic, alert to every hypocrisy that corroborates their cynical worldview, and even seductive in a perverse, power-mad way.

For these reasons, they are, like the arch-villains of โ€œBatman,โ€ the most entertaining characters in their stories. This lawless crew shares dramaturgical DNA with the vice figures from medieval morality plays, personifications of sinfulness who would confide their schemes to the audience and make theatergoers their co-conspirators in a riveting game that obviously left its mark on a young Shakespeare.

Iago, one of Shakespeareโ€™s greatest villains, is an updated version of this stock character. Page consults Martha Stoutโ€™s book โ€œThe Sociopath Next Doorโ€ to understand the characterโ€™s lack of empathy and remorse. But then he enacts the scene in which Iago subtly poisons Othelloโ€™s mind into believing that his wife is having an affair with a handsome lieutenant. Sociopaths like Iago may be an empty shell of evil, but they can also be ingenious manipulators. Shakespeare put all his understanding of human nature into Iagoโ€™s brainwashing master class.

But before Page reaches Iago, he spends time with Shylock from the โ€œThe Merchant of Venice.โ€ Shakespeare humanizes the Elizabethan stage stereotype of the villainous Jew by giving Shylock ample reason for wanting to get back at his Christian persecutors. Marlowe treats Barabas in โ€œThe Jew of Maltaโ€ as a farcical demon, but Shakespeare has Shylock ask, โ€œHas a Jew not eyes? โ€ฆ If you prick us, do we not bleed?โ€

Yes, Shakespeare is having his cake and eating it too. But Pageโ€™s portrayal, perhaps the most complete in his gallery, makes a convincing case of the playwriting leap forward.

From โ€œHamlet,โ€ Page gives us Claudius on his knees praying for pardon he knows he doesnโ€™t deserve. (โ€œMay one be pardoned and retain the offense?โ€ he asks himself, already knowing the answer.) Here we see that even the most sealed-off conscience can be invaded by second thoughts.

Lady Macbeth has no such qualms when sheโ€™s summoning evil spirits to unsex her in โ€œMacbeth.โ€ She knows conventional morality is a liability and begs these forces โ€œto stop up the access and passage to remorseโ€ so that nothing will impede the murderous plot thatโ€™s brewing within her.

To establish the right note of terror on a fog-strewn set by Arnulfo Maldonado that resembles the private chamber of a writer or madman, Page begins with Lady Macbethโ€™s chilling incantation. He returns to the tragedy later in his survey after guilt has alienated the Macbeths from each other and they find themselves trapped in a nightmare of their own making.

King Lear mournfully wonders, โ€œIs there any cause in nature that makes these hard hearts?โ€ Shakespeare canโ€™t explain evil, but he can look at it directly. And what he sees, Page argues, is our own reflection โ€” humanity, in all its fractured and flailing self-destructive foolishness.

The case Page smoothly makes is a convincing one. He is a pliant enough actor to daub each portrait with just enough psychological color. Itโ€™s not easy to do justice to such complex roles in quick succession. The genius of these troubling characters is embedded in their full dramatic contexts, requiring more than rhetorical flourishes and vocal modulations to bring them to life.

But by collectively presenting them in such a vivid and intelligent manner, Page urges us to see these devils for what they are โ€” an inextricable part of our collective story, as any perusal of the dayโ€™s political headlines will disturbingly attest.

โ€˜All the Devils Are Hereโ€™

Where: BroadStage, 1310 11th Street, Santa Monica

When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays. (Check website for exceptions.) Ends Jan 25.

Ticket: Start at $45

Contact: (310) 434-3200 or broadstage.org

Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes

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