PicksInSix Review: The Da Vinci Code-Drury Lane Theatre
High Tech ‘Da Vinci Code’ in Oakbrook
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy
The midwest regional premiere of “The Da Vinci Code” opened Thursday at Drury Lane Theatre in Oakbrook, directed by Elizabeth Margolius and starring Jeff Parker, Yaneh Assadourian and Bradley Armacost in the suspense thriller based on Dan Brown’s 2003 international bestseller.
The adaptation by Rachel Wagstaff and Duncan Abel closely follows the events that unfold after authorities discover that a prominent museum curator, Jacques Saunière (Ray Frewen) is found murdered in the Louvre and an equally prominent American symbologist, Professor Robert Langdon (Parker), is brought in to help sort out the cryptic references and religious clues at the scene of the crime. Forming an alliance with Sophie Neveu (Assadourian), a cryptologist who is Saunière’s granddaughter, the two join with Sir Leigh Teabing (Armacost) to sort through the mystery. The action then races forward while everyone is avoiding the authorities, led by Bezu Fache (Anthony Irons), and a criminal mastermind called “The Teacher” who has recruited the deranged assassin Silas (Shane Kenyon) to do his bidding.
If you are still with me and curious about how all this plays out, Drury Lane’s immersive treatment of “The Da Vinci Code” is just the show for you. No quesswork here. The play is hinged tightly to the book and 2006 film starring Tom Hanks. The film, of course, had the benefit of stunning locales from the streets of modern day Paris to monasteries and cathedrals dating to the middle ages. The stage production debuted in 2022 at the Bromley Churchill Theatre before touring in the United Kingdom. The American premiere was staged at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Maine, prior to the Drury Lane run.
It’s a very stylized show relying heavily on projections and live action video with dense text that comes at you like water blasting from a firehose. Parker, Assadourian and Armacost are first rate performers whose characters feel like they are trapped on every page of the well-known story. There are reams of exposition in the first act, so if the story is familiar to you, you may have a leg up, but it all may feel too familiar. If this is your first time with the material, you had better giddy-up or it will run you over.
Judging from the audience reaction, many departed with an entirely different perception. For me, the pace felt rushed and the ritualistic movement was distracting. Overall, the action lacked the foundation necessary to build and sustain suspense. I thought more than once that these fine actors and the high production values deserved a more intimate setting to capture the nuance of the material more effectively. Do we have to see shadows moving in slow motion to create a macabre flashback? Is urgency created simply by briskly running off stage to hop a plane to the next destination?
These are all choices, of course. There are many elements of Margolius’s production that will captivate you, however, in its present state, “The Da Vinci Code” appears to still be sorting itself out with its high-tech imagery often falling short in the shock and awe department.
PHOTO|Brett Beiner
Drury Lane Thaatre
presents
The Da Vinci Code
100 Drury Lane
Oakbrook Terrace, IL
For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago
PicksInSix® is a registered trademark of Roxbury Road Creative, LLC