You might not get a second chance to make a first impression, but can you at least improve on it?
Scenic designer Matt Saunders hopes so. He created the set for last year's reboot of Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol," the Guthrie Theater holiday favorite whose in-person return added a sense of normalcy in a time of COVID-19. But because of supply-chain issues, the theater was unable to build the full set as Saunders imagined it, although theatergoers may not have noticed.
Now, for the 48th "Carol" that opens Friday, Scrooge will get to have his redemption in a playing space fully realized. The creative team, including director Joseph Haj and playwright Lavina Jadhwani, also welcome the opportunity to make "Carol" sing in its best key.
"Theater is so ephemeral and transitory, it's exciting to get a second crack at something," Saunders said. "I wanted to create a scenic environment that would allow for Scrooge's journey — a set that could move with him and facilitate his transformation."
The Guthrie started producing "Carol" in the disco era, with a script by the late playwright Barbara Field. The sets and scripts have evolved over the decades, growing the narrative, cast and setting to sometimes unwieldy proportions. At one point, the Guthrie set was like a giant snow globe.
Saunders believes that the set should be neutral.
"I think that 'Christmas Carol,' at its core, is an existential story," Saunders said. "What Joe and I were really interested in was the ability of the scenic environment to expose Scrooge — for it to be able to be stripped to an existential void, then filled again with apparitions and images from the past. It's a ghost story, so the ability for them to appear and disappear quickly was appealing to us."
Cutting away the fat
That impulse to strip away the flab and get to the meat of the story also was front of mind when Haj commissioned a new adaptation from Chicago-based Jadhwani. She relished the opportunity to get some more time with the script.