Trustus Theatre has successfully staged Arthur Miller's classic Red Scare-era play The Crucible in a modified form as a merging of the original focus on the Salem Witch Trials of the 17th century with contemporary musings on moral panic and injustice, deceit and betrayal.
Director Jayce Tromsness, a veteran Trustus performer and company member, has moved this familiar work into a modernist arena that offers outlines of performance space backed by semi-opaque screens. Characters wear a mix of black and grey period and contemporary costumes, many bearing splashes of brilliant red symbolizing the bloody work being done.
Absent Miller's original lengthy disquisitions, the play offers the story of a community near Salem, Massachusetts, that is caught up in the puritanical purging of suspected witches. A group of young girls, following the lead of a Barbadian slave named Tituba (Nicole Perez), were seen dancing in a field by the resident minister, Rev. Parris (William Paul Brown). As the girls succumb to various mysterious ailments, including catatonia, Parris summons another minister, Rev. Hale (Asaru Buffalo) to lend assistance.
Thus begins an investigation that eventually consumes the community and leads to the arrest of many woman who were accused by the girls of being witches, following the lead of a manipulative fraud named Abigail (Kaeleigh Miller).
When Elizabeth Proctor (Ashley Rose Montondo), the wife of one of the town's most upstanding members, John Proctor (Jason Stokes), is arrested, Proctor's affair with young Abigail is revealed to the audience as is her motive for naming his wife.
The Deputy Governor (Steve Harley) arrives to judge the guilt and innocence of those accused, more panic sets in, homes and farms are emptied by wave upon wave of accusation. Defenses are seen as threats to law and order, and the court is revealed to be an elaborate double-bind where justice cannot be secured for those charged if they don't admit to being guilty.
Miller, who was a truly literary playwright, explored multiple levels of personal and societal truth, his thoughts about faith and duty are profound, and the final scene of John Proctor's "confession" is a pinnacle moment in a work that at its center extols integrity and heroism.
The Crucible is a big work, searing and upsetting in the boldness of its rage, and Trustus' production spares no one, even today's leaders who themselves stoke fear and paranoia to maintain their grip on power.

















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