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Word: cuchulain (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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With the prologue to The Death of Cuchulain, Yeats speaks directly to his audience through the character of the Old Man--a figure Yeats created shortly before his own death. Miller has taken the cue to dress Barnum, (who already fairly resembles the old poet) in a suit and spectacles Yeats might have worn himself. The impersonation of the hoary and slightly confused Yeats is the strongest performance of the evening. It makes it clear that the poet wrote a part of himself into each of the Old Men in the other plays...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Three By Yeats | 3/30/1972 | See Source »

...through much of his poetry, particularly in the three blank verse plays which open at the Ex' tonight. Written over a period of thirty-five years, they each present a different way of looking at a hero, in three stages of his life. The particular hero is the warrior Cuchulain, whose life and character Yeats drew from Irish legend and modified many times in his poems and plays...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Three By Yeats | 3/30/1972 | See Source »

...bare outline of the legends: young Cuchulain, challenged by the warrior-Queen Aoife, defeats her in battle and that night begets a son by her. Years later, after taking an oath of allegiance to his king Conchubar, Cuchulain's son appears as a nameless young man who challenges Cuchulain at Conchubar's insistence, and is killed by his father. Learning the young man's identity, Cuchulain turns on Conchubar but is charmed into attacking the waves at the seashore instead. Finally, in his old age, weakened from loss of blood, Cuchulain meets Aoife again--who has come to kill...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Three By Yeats | 3/30/1972 | See Source »

...Hawk's Well begins just before young Cuchulain's first meeting with Aoife. The play is done partly in the style of the Japanese Noh drama, a form that intrigued Yeats for its simplicity and ritual: it begins with the ceremonous unfolding and folding of a large cloth, a less mechanical and more suggestive device than a curtain for marking the division between the presence of actors and the progress of a play. William Barnum's slow and deliberate opening mime as the Old Man at the elusive fountain of immortality does more to set the scene than the other...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Three By Yeats | 3/30/1972 | See Source »

BARNUM AND KNOX complement each others' strengths again as Conchubar and Cuchulain in On Baile's Strand, but this play uses the relationship of two lesser characters, the Blind Man and the Fool, to equal purpose in commenting on the progress of Cuchulain's life. Peter Wirth and Joel Davidson succeed only partially in filling these two roles with intelligent but unrealized interpretations. Director Donnally Miller emphasizes the mutual dependence of the two half-men well enough, but the scenes where they're alone, ideal for comic improvisation, drag more than they should...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Three By Yeats | 3/30/1972 | See Source »

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