Helen Hunt Has Wanted to Do Pinter's Betrayal For Years. Now She's Getting Her Wish in Chicago | 半岛体育

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Chicago News Helen Hunt Has Wanted to Do Pinter's Betrayal For Years. Now She's Getting Her Wish in Chicago

The Oscar-winning actor stars in the marital drama opposite Ian Barford and Robert Sean Leonard at the Goodman Theatre.

Helen Hunt and Robert Sean Leonard in Betrayal Joan Marcus

The language of Harold Pinter鈥檚 Betrayal is spare and elegant. On the page, it can seem intellectual, even a little cold. But in performance, the play is 鈥渁n emotional traffic accident and you have to watch,鈥� says Goodman Theatre artistic director, Susan Booth, who helms the show at the Chicago institution February 8鈥揗arch 30.

The play鈥檚 three high-profile stars鈥�Helen Hunt, Ian Barford, and Robert Sean Leonard鈥攁gree that this is an intense and emotional story, in which what is unseen and unsaid is just as important as what is in the text. Performed without intermission, its nine scenes chronicle an extramarital affair backwards in time, with the first scenes showing the aftermath, and the last showing how it all began. 鈥淭he title is relevant in this play in every page, in every character, in every moment,鈥� says Academy Award-winner Helen Hunt, who plays Emma, the wife-turned- lover. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the betrayal of friendship, the betrayal of romance, the betrayal of truth.鈥�

鈥淓very character in the play is a betrayer and betrayed,鈥� relates Ian Barford, a veteran Chicago actor, producer, and Tony nominee who plays Emma鈥檚 husband, Robert. Barford, who had previously played Robert鈥檚 friend Jerry in a 2007 Steppenwolf production, says the play asks crucial questions: Who are we? How well do we ever know the people we think we know? Why do people lie?

Robert Sean Leonard, the Tony Award-winning actor who plays Jerry, quips that Pinter had really 鈥渟harpened his pencils鈥� by the time he wrote Betrayal in 1978, which he based on his own extramarital affair. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very human story and there鈥檚 a lot of heartbreak in it and a lot of tears,鈥� says Leonard. Describing Pinter as a 鈥渨eird guy鈥� who had strange views about relationships, Leonard says the play is a 鈥渓ittle disorienting鈥� to be in.

Hunt had been asked to do the play on Broadway years ago, but her schedule didn鈥檛 allow her to take it on. 鈥淭hen,鈥� says Hunt, 鈥淪usan Booth asked me about it and I talked to her about the productions I鈥檝e seen and didn鈥檛 love, which is great when you want to work on something, because there鈥檚 no point in doing something someone did perfectly.鈥� The actress took to Booth immediately. 鈥淪he鈥檚 so smart and so clear and listens in such a clear way, too, which is a rare thing in anybody, much less a director.鈥�

Helen Hunt and Robert Sean Leonard in Betrayal Joan Marcus

Leonard had appeared with the late Brian Dennehy in the 2003 Broadway production of EugeneO鈥橬eill鈥檚 Long Day鈥檚 Journey into Night, directed by the Goodman鈥檚 former longtime artistic director, Robert Falls. Leonard says Dennehy 鈥測elled鈥� at him for years to do a play in Chicago. 鈥淣ew York is changing,鈥� suggests Leonard. 鈥淚t鈥檚 different than it used to be, theater- wise, and the things I love don鈥檛 happen in New York very much anymore. That鈥檚 what Brian always said. The places that are absolutely still doing things are Minneapolis and Chicago and San Diego. Of all those places, Chicago鈥檚 the closest, so I thought it might be time to go.鈥�

Leonard sees his own character, Jerry, as the most honest in the play, yet given to compartmentalization. 鈥淗e鈥檚 extremely deluded, but I think his intentions are good, certainly a little better than the other two,鈥� says Leonard. 鈥淗e thinks it鈥檚 okay that you have a wife and you have kids that you love and you meet someone that just turns your head and makes you feel things you never felt before and doesn鈥檛 seem to have any problem with those things happening in the same lifetime.鈥�

Barford sees the three characters as bound together in a complex web, and each of the nine scenes as a 鈥減erfect little play.鈥� Overall, he observes, Pinter 鈥渋s very much interested in dialogue that leads an audience into silences, when people are not able to speak because there is a kind of truth that has been discovered that significantly alters them.鈥�

The characters in Betrayal often talk about people who never appear鈥擩erry鈥檚 wife, for example. Hunt says a big part of her work as an actor is filling in the parts of a character鈥檚 life the audience doesn鈥檛 see. That鈥檚 especially true in this play. 鈥淭here鈥檚 magical thinking that I subscribe to that somehow the audience feels all these things,鈥� Hunt says. 鈥淥nce in a while, I have to go, 鈥楻ight, seven people might get that鈥�. But I have faith in those seven people, and I have faith that at least the people who don鈥檛 get it will feel that it鈥檚 filled in.鈥�

Barford says the unseen characters in the play are all vivid in the performers鈥� minds. 鈥淲e hope that audiences have a strong sense of who they are,鈥� he says, noting that Pinter intended that some mysteries are revealed by way of omission. 鈥淥n some level, this allows audience members to infer whatever they might.鈥� Whatever ticket holders decide about Betrayal, they will have plenty to talk about鈥攐r avoid talking about鈥攐nce their curtain comes down. Barford predicts 鈥渟ome quiet car rides鈥� home.

Photos: Betrayal at the Goodman Theatre

 
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