Subtitle: 
Enron Shows the Art of Greed

The acclaimed London production of Lucy Prebble's Enron, a docudrama using song, movement, projections, and raptor costumes, tells the story of the collapse of the once fabled energy giant in a most unconventional way.

While still running on the West End, the play opened here with an American cast: Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz, Tony nom Gregory Itzin (The Kentucky Cycle; President Logan, TV's "24," "The Mentalist"), Stephen Kunken (Our Town, Rock 'n Roll, Frost/Nixon, Festen) and Tony/Olivier nom Marin Mazzie (Kiss Me Kate, Ragtime, Passion) play wrongdoers at the top of the Enron food chain. Rupert Goold (Macbeth, starring Patrick Stewart), whose Headlong Theatre commissioned the work, continues as director.

Kunken portrays Andy Fastow, Enron's chief financial officer who charts a slide into near dementia, albeit with ingenuity. As the company swallows up smaller companies and becomes to go-to stock for investors, Fastow is the one who finds the "sure-fire" way out of the depths of debt.

"Some have found it strange that an English writer decided to take on
Enron's epic rise and equally epic fall," related Kunken, at Sardi's in a break from rehearsals across the street at the Broadhurst. "Lucy really did her research. What impressed all of us, as was my experience in Frost/Nixon (where he played Jim Reston), was that like (playwright) Peter Morgan and (director) Michael Grandage, Lucy and Rupert (Goold) really invested in the American cast. They didn't just take us for granted."

Since the play is about such a famous American scandal, he says Prebble and Goold were interested in cast members' take far beyond the British sensibilities, especially regarding the language and if it had punch to it. "We were not only quite open," he laughs. "It was a matter of try and stop us. Sometimes we would discuss something as simple as sentence structure, the rhythm of a bit of dialogue, or a British spin of an Americanism."

Regarding the latter, he, Butz, Itzin, and Mazzie gave input on our colloquial way of saying things. "They listened to our feedback," Kunken points out, "and tweaked some things." He releates that the Brits didn't necessarily know the U.S. part of the story; and Americans didn't know the U.K. part. "On each side, there was much new information to be revealed."

Enron couldn't have opened on Bway at a more apt time. Americans are fed up with all manner of financial world shenanigans, and if the headlines aren't screaming about Madoff and the allegedly dirty doings at Lehman Brothers, it's Goldman Sachs.

Kunken notes that he plays "the good guy who becomes the bad guy. Andy got away with what he was doing for much too long. Interestingly, he may be out of prison next year. So much of investing is built on faith - the company's track record, who's running the company. Enron and so many businesses create this idea of groupthink. The bubble is built around spin, but when the bubble bursts, all the spin goes away. It was all perception."

Enron's amazing growth was in the end built on spin. Investors across the board had faith in the company, believed what Lay was saying. Those who believed, worked there, and invested got really stung and literally lost everything.

Fastow did turn out to be less of a bad guy than the others, explains Kunken. "Some of the money people got back was because Andy, to save his skin, cut a plea bargain and gave back a lot of the $45-million he stashed making those wild deals."

He went on to say, "The Enron fiasco was sort of the first drip in the bucket, but everyday we're reading stories that have that bucket overflowing. There were so many lessons on greed in what was exposed at Enron, but no one seems to be learning from them.

"A lot of the financially-creative things Lucy has Andy doing," he continues, "such as his innovative way of creating numbers, often from thin air, are still being done. It goes on and on and on."

However, the real Fastow, Jeffrey Skilling (the Enron CEO convicted of 19 counts of fraud, conspiracy and insider trading), Kenneth Lay (Enron's ultra-religious chairman and original CEO), and Rebecca Mark, head of Enron's International division (the one top-tier executive who wasn't indicted in the scandal; so in Enron, mainly because of certain liberties Prebble took, she's fictitiously-named Claudia Roe and played by Mazzie) didn't have what Tessie Tura, Mazeppa, and Electra so eloquently sung of in Gypsy: a gimmick.

Fastow/Kunken's is a whopper: vicious, red-eyed, miniature dinosaur-like creatures called raptors, who devour, at least in company ledgers, Enron's ever-mounting debt through shell companies.

Ben Brantley, in the NY Times, wrote, "Come to think of it, it's Fastow's relationship with the raptors, not Skilling, that is the show's most fascinating. The vision of Fastow -- a necktie wrapped around his head -- and his raptors in his inner sanctum, just before Enron goes boom, brings to mind a war-warped, jungle-fevered character out of "Apocalypse Now" or "The Deer Hunter." It's a hilarious, scary image and ... suggests the real heart of darkness meant to be beating at its center."

Kunken said that as an actor, "being in Frost/Nixon, working with Peter and sitting between Frank (Langella) and Michael (Sheen) as they bounced their energy around was akin to a master class. It's that way again with Norbert and Rupert."

What's most interesting about Enron, he explains, "is that even though a majority of our audiences know all the ins and outs of what happened at Enron, perhaps because they were heavily invested and lost everything, Lucy's play still has a lot of thriller elements. You know the ultimate outcome, yet it's still edge-of-the-seat entertainment.

After auditioning for Goold, Kunken didn't know how long the process of a Broadway transfer would take. "I was fortunate to have stepped into the Off-Broadway revival of Our Town (directed by David Cromer), which I loved. It was a fantastic company to work with, a kinder, gentler world than the one I'm in now!"

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Arts/Arts_/Pictures/2010/4/13/1271154407888/Norbert-Leo-Butz-and-Step-001.jpg

 

Writer: 
Ellis Nassour
Date: 
May 2010
Key Subjects: 
Ernon, Stephen Kunken, Lucy Prebble