Pinter’s Mystery

“The Collection” is an early Pinter work. Yet it contains the hallmarks, if less subtley, of later Pinter masterpieces, such as “The Homecoming,” “No Man’s Land” and “Betrayal.” It’s almost a writing exercise, in which the various possibilities of infidelity — in fact and in fancy — are explored geometrically. A wife may, or may not, have been unfaithful with another, probably gay, man. He in turn may, or may not, have been unfaithful to his much older, presumed lover. Aglet’s production lets us be surprised by Pinter’s humor; his insinuating, persistent sexual innuendo; constant role reversal and outbursts of anger; near violence and fear of loss; and his view of women as the ultimate victors, the enigmatic characters in ultimate control. If this reading at Berkshire Theater Festival’s Unicorn Theater March 26 took a while to warm up and if at first director Thomas Gruenewald overdid Pinter’s famous pauses and silences, it was soon delivering Pinter’s carefully chosen words tersely yet smoothly. As Harry, the older man, Kale Brown has fine moments of hurling lines at his presumed lover or of trying to deflect James, the suspicious, maybe-cuckolded husband. Jim Beaudin makes James a man of potential menace as well as of possible sexual ambiguity. David Joseph’s Bill is quite good, all superficiality and surface, glib and obviously attracted to James. Stephanie Hedges as Stella the wife, has the most difficult role since there is little to it: few words, unfinished paragraphs, little to do. Yet she alone, like the stronger Pinter women to come, seems at the end to know the truth. Aglet shows us how fascinating even minor Pinter is. “The Collection” will be repeated at TriArts’ Bok Gallery April 2. Wine and snacks are served at 7 p.m., and the performance begins at 7:30. Tickets are $20 and can be reserved at 860 435-6928 or online at www.aglettheater.net.

Latest News

Final four finish for Mountaineers
HVRHS goalie Vi Salazar made 10 saves in the semifinal game against Morgan Wednesday, Nov. 12.
Photo by Riley Klein

NEWTOWN — Housatonic Valley Regional High School's girls soccer team's state tournament run concluded in the semifinals with a 4-2 loss to Morgan High School Wednesday, Nov. 12.

The final four finish was the deepest playoff push for Housatonic since 2014. Lainey Diorio scored both goals and keeper Vi Salazar logged 10 saves in the semifinal game.

Keep ReadingShow less
Local writer shares veterans’ stories in Malcolm Gladwell’s ‘Medal of Honor’ podcast

Local writer shares veterans’ stories in Malcolm Gladwell’s ‘Medal of Honor’ podcast

Photo by Aly Morrissey

SHARON, Conn. — After 20 years as a magazine editor with executive roles at publishing giants like Condé Nast and Hearst, Meredith Rollins never imagined she would become the creative force behind a military history podcast. But today, she spends her days writing about some of the most heroic veterans in United States history for “Medal of Honor: Stories of Courage,” a podcast produced by Malcolm Gladwell’s company, Pushkin Industries.

From her early days in book publishing to two decades in magazines and later a global content strategist for Weight Watchers, Rollins has built a long and varied career in storytelling.

Keep ReadingShow less
Salisbury honors veterans in snowy ceremony

Chris Ohmen (left) held the flag while Chris Williams welcomed Salisbury residents to a Veterans Day ceremony at Town Hall Tuesday, Nov. 11.

Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan

SALISBURY — About 30 people turned out for the traditional Veterans Day ceremony at Salisbury Town Hall on a cold and snowy Tuesday morning, Nov. 11.

Chris Ohmen handled the colors and Chris Williams ran the ceremony.

Keep ReadingShow less