Ā鶹“«Ć½ Theatre Department Stages Classic Chekhov Play ā€˜Three Sistersā€™

Three Sisters play

In a time when itā€™s easier to watch a movie at home on the couch than to go to a movie theater, why should people make the effort to attend live theater? Emily Cummings ā€™23, one of the leads in Three Sisters, Ā鶹“«Ć½ā€™s upcoming mainstage production, believes that people should watch plays for ā€œthe catharsis of being able to relate to a character on stage and see a story toldā€ in a way that canā€™t be replicated.

Three Sisters, being performed March 2-5 at Seaver Theatre, provides plenty of opportunities to empathize with its characters as it takes audience members into the lives of the Prozorov sisters in a brutally realistic way. Written by Anton Chekhov in 1900, the style of the play is ā€œtheatrical realism,ā€ which aims to replicate real life.

ā€œThis play has become a stunning reflection of everyday life across time,ā€ says Zalia Maya SC ā€™24, who plays the eldest sister Olga.

The setting is provincial Russia, and the three titular sisters dream of moving to Moscow. What ensues is ā€œyoung people experiencing their first major disappointment,ā€ says Talya Klein, visiting assistant professor of theatre and director of the play. ā€œIf anyone understands that, itā€™s this current group of college students who just lived through a global pandemic and whose college experiences were maybe not what they had envisioned.ā€

Bleak as that may sound, the story speaks to the sistersā€™ ā€œstrength as well as their resourcefulness,ā€ says Klein. ā€œChekhov was interested in these women and how they live and negotiate a life where they donā€™t have a lot of control.ā€

Cummings, a double major in theatre and linguistics, plays Masha, the middle sister who is trapped in an unhappy marriage. ā€œI can relate to her in terms of dwelling on past regrets but also really wanting to change things,ā€ she says.

To prepare for her role, Cummings spent time outside of rehearsals writing journal entries as Masha to better understand the character. Chekhov was a key figure in the movement of literary realism, and ā€œhis plays provided the blueprint for what would become the Stanislavski technique of acting, which is the basis for all modern acting training that exists in the last century,ā€ says Klein.

For Cummings, the experience of being a part of this play has been one of highlights of her time in college. ā€œIā€™ve loved every minute of the process with the cast and the director,ā€ she says. Klein has allowed the actors to follow their natural instincts, Cummings says. ā€œIt makes me feel like I get to actually be a human because I get to do just what I would do.ā€ Maya adds, ā€œShe allowed me to bring my own reality to Olga and breathe my life into her.ā€

Klein believes that audience members will enjoy the show precisely because the actors have made the characters their own. ā€œThese characters donā€™t feel like words on a page anymore. They feel like three-dimensional people,ā€ she says. ā€œThatā€™s when itā€™s a thrill. Thatā€™s when itā€™s exciting to watch.ā€

Cummings understands that people are busy and that theater takes time, but, she says, ā€œI would really hope that people would take a little bit of time to come and watch it because thereā€™s been so much love and effort and energy that has been put into the show.ā€

Performances of ā€œThree Sistersā€ will take place on March 2 at 8 p.m., March 3 at 8 p.m., March 4 at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., and March 5 at 2 p.m. Tickets can be pre-purchased or in person at Seaver Theatre.