NEW YORK — On a recent Wednesday, a dozen members of the
cast of “Camelot” gathered in a circle in a rehearsal room in the basement of
Lincoln Center Theater. Fergie Philippe, who plays Sir Sagramore and
understudies as King Arthur, sat on a chair in the middle, staring quizzically
at a sheet of paper with a monologue from Act V, Scene 1 of Shakespeare’s
“Titus Andronicus.”
اضافة اعلان
Next to him stood Dakin Matthews, who plays both Merlyn and
Pellinore, dressed in cargo shorts and a purple polo. As Philippe began speaking,
Matthews squinted his eyes shut and silently mouthed the words.
“Even now I curse the day ...,” Philippe said before he was
quickly cut off by Matthews, who jabbed a finger in the air.
“You went down on ‘day,’” Matthews said, referring to
Philippe’s incorrect inflection.
Over the next two hours, Matthews paced the room coaching
the group through monologues from “Julius Caesar,” “Henry IV” and “Macbeth,”
interrupting a performer to correct the pronunciation of “doth,” or to help
find the “internal shape” in a text.
“I feel like I’m a monk in a scriptorium keeping something
alive,” Matthews said.
Matthews, an 82-year-old veteran of the theater, has
performed in over 200 shows around the world — from Broadway to the Teatro
Español in Madrid. His life has become inseparable from the stage: In addition
to acting, he has directed, translated, and written numerous plays of his own,
many of which have been performed on the West Coast.
But his colleagues know Matthews best as a maestro of the
intricate world of Shakespearean drama, the man who can tell you exactly how to
untangle a thorny text from “Henry IV.” And when he appears in shows, he often
hosts workshops during which younger members can learn Shakespeare.
“There’s this complete understanding that there’s somebody
in this room who has way more experience than us, who has put the work in, and
on a different level performs at a caliber different than us,” Philippe said,
“and we all agree and know and decide, ‘Yes, please teach us.’”
Born in Oakland, California, in 1940, Matthews grew up
surrounded by an extended Irish family. He was a sophomore at a Catholic high
school when he was introduced to Shakespeare’s “Henry IV.”
Wanting to enter the priesthood, he moved to Rome to
continue his religious education.
One summer in 1962, he traveled from Rome to Stratford,
England, where he saw his first professional Shakespeare production. It was
Peter Hall’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Matthews, 21 at the time, was
transfixed.
The actor Dakin
Matthews in New York on July 19, 2023. Matthews, one of the stars of “Camelot”
on Broadway, helps younger castmates hone their craft with Shakespeare lessons
between shows.
“I was like, ‘Oh, my God,’” he recalled. “It was really like
entering a portal, like entering a different world.”
A seed was planted. “This is something one could actually
do,” he realized.
Back in Rome, he rallied the other priests-in-training,
purchased costumes from a theater shop and directed two student plays, “Julius
Caesar” and “Henry IV.”
Matthews returned to the Bay Area and later earned a master’s
in English from East Bay, where he became a professor. While in graduate
school, he won the role of Falstaff in “Henry IV” at the Marin Shakespeare
Festival in 1965.
For the next two decades, Matthews taught and rehearsed
during the day, and starred in shows around the Bay Area at night, darting
around in his green Volkswagen Beetle. (He met his wife, Anne McNaughton, in
1967 at the Santa Clara Shakespeare Festival.)
In 1990, he retired from teaching and moved to Los Angeles,
where he continued working in theater and began performing in movies and TV,
including “Down Home,” “Soul Man” and “The Jeff Foxworthy Show.”
Matthews made his Broadway debut in 2003 in “Henry IV.”
Ethan Hawke, who played Hotspur, remembered watching in awe as Matthews argued
with Kevin Kline, who played Falstaff, over minutiae in the text.
“It’s like listening to Thoreau and Emerson bicker about the
state of mankind,” Hawke said. “It was life and death for them.”
The earliest of Matthews’ Shakespeare workshops for fellow
cast members was in 2001, for the actors in Peter Hall’s “Romeo and Juliet” in
Los Angeles. He also held the classes for the Broadway production of “To Kill a
Mockingbird” and has led them for the Actors Center in New York. As Sunday’s
closing night of “Camelot” approached, Matthews resumed the workshops.
Philippe said learning from Matthews has made his “Camelot”
performances more versatile.
“It gave me the opportunity to play a bit more. I was able
to find some new things in the character every night,” he said. “It just makes
you a smarter actor.”
Matthews has no plans to stop acting, but he said he has
lost 20 pounds while performing in “Camelot” and has started to feel his age.
His knees creak, and his voice can’t project as it once did.
“For the first time it felt like work,” he said. “That’s the
first time I’ve ever seriously thought about retiring.”
For now, he plans to keep performing and to continue
mentoring a younger generation of actors.
“We’re bridging a gap, a chasm,” he said. “And someone’s got
to keep something going somehow.”
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