Anthony Lawton and Mirror Theatre Company

The Screwtape Letters
Home
The Great Divorce
The Screwtape Letters
The Devil and Billy Markham
Reviews of my Work
What Audiences are Saying
Upcoming Events
Video Clips
Resume
Contact Me

   Lawton has adapted C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters into a 90-minute, two-person play.

   The show features Screwtape, an undersecretary in Hell's sprawling bureaucracy.  He dictates letters to his demon nephew, Wormwood, who has been assigned the task of tempting a single, earthly soul to damnation.  Screwtape offers diabolical advice on the best ways to lead a mortal into self-delusion, surrender, pettiness, vice, and despair.  The language crackles with satirical wit and penetrating insight on the psychology of human failure and unhappiness.

   Punctuating the play are dances between each letter, in styles as varied as tap, Latin ballroom, jazz, martial arts, and rock, and which feature extras like bullwhips and fire-eating.  Screwtape performs these dances with his sinuous secretary, Toadpipe.

   The play needs to be performed in a professional theatre with a lighting grid and sound system.  The Mirror needs at least one month's notice to prepare for a performance.  The fee for The Screwtape Letters is necessarily higher than for the Mirror's other plays, because it involves two actors, a stage manager, a set, a computer projector, and at least a day's worth of technical rehearsal prior to performance.


PRESS REVIEWS

The Screwtape Letters at The Lantern

Philadelphia City Paper

Thursday, January 10th, 2008 at 1:55 pm

posted by mark cofta 


Through January 13, Lantern Theater Company, 10th and Ludlow streets, 215-829-0395 lanterntheater.org.

How do you make a religious treatise fun? Set it in Hell, and teach indirectly through the ironic voice of a middle-management devil instructing a minion how to steer a man away from "The Enemy." The Screwtape Letters, by C.S. Lewis (of renewed Chronicles of Narnia fame), seems an unlikely work for stage adaptation, but actor-writer Tony Lawton’s energetic version succeeds.

Lawton, who made an engaging monologue out of Lewis’s The Great Divorce last year, enlivens Screwtape’s letters to his novice Wormwood with interludes featuring Genevieve Perrier as Toadpipe, Screwtape’s icy-cold Bond Girl assistant. Each time she delivers a report from Wormwood, she and Screwtape engage in some sort of combat: acrobatic physical battles, a fire-eating contest, a ferociously fun tap duel, and even whip-cracking sexual games. These are all surprising, spectacular encounters, the thrill heightened by the small space (the squeamish should avoid the first row).

All this action spices the meat of the matter, which is an often clever and insightful exploration of the idea of Love as humanity’s divine trait. Screwtape instructs Wormwood to battle against it with all sorts of temptations - the biggest of which, sounding very modern in its identification of the evils of television and video games, is idleness. The obstacle to the empty, tedious life Wormwood shapes for his victim is genuine pleasure - so, don’t fear, this isn’t another "just say no" lecture.

Screwtape confesses, however, to not understanding Love; it must be, he insists, merely The Enemy’s ploy. Lawton shows this cocky devil beginning to glimpse greater ideas, making what in lesser hands would be merely recitation into powerful realization.

Missing The Screwtape Letters out of distaste for pumped-up election-year piety would be a mistake; though Lawton scores an easy chuckle when Screwtape hangs a sneering Dick Cheney portrait, the play skewers today’s preening politicians regardless of party with venomous glee. (Some ironic commentary may be unintentional as Lewis couldn’t have foreseen our current administration when he had Screwtape complain of "a failure of our intelligence department.")

Go for the showy pyrotechnics like Perrier’s increasingly slinky outfits, the actors’ daring choreography, even the witty PowerPoint presentation that illustrates Screwtape’s letters . . . and stay for the fascinating rumination on contemporary morals through Lawton’s all-too-human devil.

 

     

Anthony Lawton in “The Screwtape Letters.”

The Screwtape Letters is a play everyone will enjoy

By R.B. Strauss

Artstalker


As a Jew, I wandered into The Screwtape Letters, based on the novella by noted Christian writer C.S. Lewis (he of Narnia fame), not knowing what to expect. Boredom? Befuddlement? An excuse for a nice nap? I was thoroughly entertained, and yes, engaged. True, some of my interest was because of my unfamiliarity with Christianity, but for the most part, the show’s success was due to the performances by Anthony Lawton, who also adapted the work, and his costar and basically silent partner, Genevieve Perrier. They make a dynamic duo indeed.


Though Lawton handles most of the speechifying, this is not a long, drawn-out monologue. Rather it is a series of epistles fired off by Screwtape (Lawton), a mid-level demon in Hell, to his underling and nephew, Wormwood, on the whys and wherefores of seducing a single soul to the dark side. Punctuating each dictation, Toadpipe (Ms. Perrier) returns with a follow-up missive from Wormwood and then the fun begins in earnest in the form of nifty dance numbers and other bits of business that rely on timing and sexual tension in equal measure. Oh, and both cut loose with solos to boot. 


The work itself is just as vibrant, without a scrap of verbal flab or pedantic proselytizing. Screwtape comes across as someone who is just plain tired of it all, and since when do the jailers become the jailed? Indeed, this poor functionary in the vast corporate bureaucracy that is the Underworld is trapped in his own circumstances, though I wondered where he goes when five o’clock rolls around. He explicates evil thoroughly, and it cuts across all faiths in its laserlike precision and simple delineation. There is also a purely existential component to swearing a soul to sin in that Screwtape offers up the same bit of business that Sartre did: Hell is other people. Indeed, the micro and the macro are given the same attention. A petty annoyance with one’s mother can set one on the road to damnation just as easily as if one were a war criminal.


It doesn’t matter if you are rich or poor, either. In fact, the more prosperous you are, the better, as there is a whole world of devilish delights that one can afford without blinking an eye. Here, I was reminded of Wordsworth’s famous poem, The World Is Too Much With Us, with its classic image—“Getting and spending.” Indeed, one tonic against evil is just what the Romantic poets offered, a nice stroll to appreciate Nature. Nature is genuine and real, whereas so much else that embodies temptation is fake.


However, Screwtape doesn’t have all the answers. He is certain that God and His minions are just as manipulative and small-minded, yet there is something that he doesn’t get, that he can’t get, and it is killing him. As to what that is, you’ll have to see the play. Oh, and a miracle happened to me during the matinee, in that when a tune by Led Zeppelin rocked the house, not only was I not disgusted by a band I’ve hated from the moment I heard them way back in 1969, but I actually enjoyed the song. Who’da thunk it?




JANUARY 11, 2008

Phillyist Reviews... The Screwtape Letters


Tap dancing! Martial arts! Fire swallowing! S&M!

Is it the latest show by the Peek-A-Boo Revue?

No. It's the Lantern Theater Company's revival production of The Screwtape Letters, adapted from the book by C.S. Lewis by, and starring, Anthony Lawton. As with all of C.S. Lewis's works, Screwtape has a decidedly Christian slant— in this case, speaking on the ideas of faith and morality, and how their abandonment could mean eternal damnation— but the story and execution can still be enjoyable to the "heathen" audience.

The book is composed of a series of letters written by Screwtape, an upper-level demon (as far as the "lowerarchy" is concerned) to his nephew Wormwood, a junior tempter sent to earth for the sake of corrupting a young man's soul, such that when he dies, he'll be sent to hell. The play takes these letters and makes them into a ninety-minute lecture on good and evil, and how to cultivate the latter while pretending to be the former. That description might sound a little boring, but the production is anything but, thanks to Lawton's dynamic performance. So persuasive a Screwtape is he that at some points, you even find yourself agreeing with him. "Yes," you find yourself saying, "love is a construct!" Probably not what C.S. Lewis had in mind, but effective nonetheless.

Lawton is helped by the always-impeccable Geneviève Perrier. Usually more of a girl-next-door (as in the Lantern's The Lonesome West and Mum's Fantoccini Brothers Return), her mostly-silent role in Screwtape is dirty-hot, sexy in that kind of "I can't introduce you to my parents" kind of way. Playing Toadpipe, Screwtape's snarky secretary (say that five times fast!), Perrier enters between scenes and handles live fire (literally handles it), a giant bull whip, and some pretty serious-looking surgical instruments, all the time looking... like she was naughty enough in life to land herself a spot in Hell.

And though Lawton himself is a fantastic Screwtape, it's the entre-scenes with Lawton and Perrier that often steal the show. The monologues, although interesting, can get a little dull after a while (through no fault of Lawton's acting, but perhaps through fault of his adapting), and the dance numbers and pantomimed scenes rouse the audience from their theological navel-gazing and ready them for more. Do they have anything to do with the plot? Not much. But without them, The Screwtape Letters would feel incomplete and unsatisfying. Bravo to Lawton for anticipating this and rectifying it, giving the audience a complete, cohesive production. It's obvious why it was such a success that the Lantern decided to revive it.



January 7th, 2008

The Screwtape Letters: In Review

Posted by uwishunu in Theatre

 (7 votes)



Post by Mary van Ogtrop

Now that the most wonderful, family-filled and gift-giving time of the year is behind us, it’s the perfect time to get demonic with The Screwtape Letters.

Based on C.S. Lewis’ 1942 novel – categorized as Christian fiction – The Screwtape Letters is a sexy, comical and often explosive (read: fire-eating) exploration of the seven deadly sins.

Anthony Lawton, recently named Philadelphia’s “Best One-Man Theatre” by City Paper, stars as Screwtape, a mid-level demon trying to mentor his nephew Wordwood, a “newbie” demon, in the ways of tempting a soul into a lustful and debaucherous life. Genevieve Perrier is his chain-smoking, tight-lipped secretary – and a bit of a temptress in her own right.

Lawton is incredible in his own adaptation of the novel, spinning out Screwtape’s monologues with the devilish stoicism of a master rhetorician. But all Screwtape’s wit and witticisms don’t add up to much when he’s stuck in, well, Hell. None of his musings on double standards, self-centeredness and all-out hedonism can help him understand the Christian notion of love. And that drives him crazy.

Lawton and Perrier light up St. Stephen’s Theater with truly interactive (and very athletic) performances, where multimedia displays inform the narrative and techno music or Led Zeppelin can lead to a dance number at any moment. Fair warning: some of the imagery in the play can be a little unsettling. But that’s sin, baby.



The Screwtape Letters: The Devil You Say

By Matthew Ray

Published: Jan 08, 2008 10:51 AM

Updated: Jan 08, 2008 11:06 AM

Posted to: Concert/Show Review

The Lantern Theater Company stages an adaptation of C.S. Lewis' novel, The Screwtape Letters, which chronicles a demon's efforts to mentor his protégé in the art of evil.



If you’ve spent the last couple of New Years ignoring your resolutions and indulging your vices, you should go see The Lantern Theater Company’s production of "The Screwtape Letters" at St. Stephen’s Theater at 10th and Ludlow.

An adaptation of the C.S. Lewis novel, "The Screwtape Letters" is a dramatic look at moral downfall through the letters of a demon, Screwtape, to his protégé Wormwood. With each letter, Screwtape mentors the demonling Wormwood on the tricks of the soul-snatching trade. How to use lust and greed, pride and self-righteousness to turn the human “patient” away from “The Enemy” (God).

Anthony Lawton’s performance as Screwtape is devilishly wonderful. He does double demonic duty not only as the lead, he also adapted the novel for the stage. Joining Lawton is Genevieve Perrier as Toadpipe, a sultry secretary ghoul. In between scenes the terrible two gnash the seven deadly sins in vignettes ranging from tap dancing to fire eating, with a sprinkle of light S&M thrown in for good measure.

Despite a large dollop of humor, this show isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s a stark reminder of the vanities of life, and a deep and unabashed look at personal and secret lies. Theater for the spirit, perhaps? Maybe. It can be funny in places, it can be grim in others, and you might find yourself a bit reflective when you leave. But how often do you actually get to travel to Hell and back without getting burned?

The Screwtape Letters runs through Jan. 13 at The Lantern Theater Company @ St. Stephen’s Theater, 10th and Ludlow, Philadelphia, PA

 215-829-0395, www.lanterntheater.org



Posted on Fri, Jan. 4, 2008



Where sex and violence needs spicing up

By Toby Zinman

For The Inquirer

Lantern Theater presents the reprise of Anthony Lawton's adaptation and performance of The Screwtape Letters. If you like 90-minute sermons - albeit cunning ones - on the Christian tenet of God's love, this show is for you. If you like good theater but find smug homilies on the nature of evil tedious, you'll have some good acting to watch if you can stay awake.

C.S. Lewis, best known for The Chronicles of Narnia, which are also Christian allegories, is, apparently, Lawton's man; he adapted and performed Lewis' The Great Divorce in 2006. Making a religious treatise stage-worthy is a mighty feat, and Lawton, with the agile help of Genevieve Perrier, spices up what is, essentially, an immense monologue using the usual seasonings: sex and violence.

The show at St. Stephen's Theatre opens in an office in Hell; Screwtape, a middle management devil, has the job of overseeing Wormwood, a young devil assigned to corrupt a human being. This novice's reports are delivered by a hostile cutie-pie (Perrier) - who does not speak until near the end, but who appears in various costumes to sneer, seduce, tango, and sensually writhe. Her two battles with Screwtape - especially the ferocious tap dance - are the best of these interludes, while the sexy scenes are fairly embarrassing in their lack of subtlety. There are various circus acts - performed in amazingly close quarters - involving fire-eating and whip cracking (at which point a small prayer to Whomever might be a good idea if you're sitting on the front row).

The monologue is comprised of Screwtape's letters, replies to Wormwood's reports. In them, he explains the processes of corruption used to achieve the desired goal: damnation. "The safest road to Hell is the gradual one - soft underfoot, no sudden turnings." He deconstructs hypocrisy, family, and boredom, but remains stymied by the mystery of God's love of mankind. The assumption that morality is a function of Christian theology might be seen as particularly irksome, immersed as we are in the current swamp of religious electioneering.

The set features a screen for a PowerPoint presentation; we see photographs of the sweet-faced "subject" and his mother, paintings by Bosch, Dali, and Fuseli, charts illustrating the relation of the human will to intellect and fantasy, headlines announcing the start of World War II, and a variety of other visual aids. A photograph of Dick Cheney oversees it all from the wall. Stuff certainly does happen, but not in this play.