Strauss-Kahn drama hits the stage in lacklustre play over what happened at the Sofitel | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Mostly Cloudy  14.4°C

Strauss-Kahn drama hits the stage in lacklustre play over what happened at the Sofitel

FILE - In this Nov.15, 2012 file photo, French actor Eric Debrosse acting as former International Monetary Fund leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn, left, and actress Jelle Saminnadin acting as Nafissatou Diallo, the hotel housekeeper, who accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexually assaulting her, pose during a photo opportunity as they perform in a play "Suite 2806" in a Paris theatre. One-time French presidential hopeful Dominique Strauss Kahn has been to hell and back since he was charged, then acquitted in New York of making a hotel maid perform a sexual act in 2011. Now DSK will be treading the boards, in a salacious new play that recounts knock for knock what might have happened in the now infamous suite of the Manhattan Sofitel hotel. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)

PARIS - The calamitous moments inside the New York hotel that cost Dominique Strauss-Kahn his career, his dignity and possibly even his wife have now been turned into theatre.

Some say bad theatre.

It's been over 18 months since the former International Monetary Fund chief was charged — and subsequently acquitted — of sexual assault charges brought by New York hotel maid Nafissatou Diallo. Now a play in Paris titled "Suite 2806" — the number of Strauss-Kahn's Sofitel hotel room — asks, "What might have happened?"

But a year and a half is a long time. What was once a salacious story that provoked fascination on both sides of the Atlantic with its mix of sex, money and power has somehow ended up as a drama that's dull as dishwater.

The play — panned by critics — has been struggling to fill seats since its premiere last month despite substantial press coverage. That provokes the question: Is the French public finally losing its appetite for tabloid tales about the man known here as DSK?

"We've read about this DSK thing so much, what else can be said that's new? It was boring," said theatre-goer Alexey Loginov, 22, who admitted to falling asleep during the play.

"The sordid story remains sordid," said Eric Dimicoli, 42, another viewer.

Set in a reconstructed Sofitel room with a signature gold mustard decor, the play, according to director Philippe Hersen, is a 60-minute "study of morality, sexual addiction, and power with money," between a DSK-type character named Daniel Weissberg and a black housekeeper named Evangeline.

The actors' resemblance to their respective characters is compelling. Eric Debrosse, as Strauss-Kahn, got immediate applause for his white bleached hair, Quasimodo-esque back and pot-belly — apparently thanks to a strict junk food diet that helped him gain over 13 pounds.

But the play's lacklustre repartee and endless facile moralizing — highlighted by lines like "It's in the nature of things: Men dominate women" and "Prostitution is the essence of a woman" — can disappoint viewers.

Perhaps its most frustrating aspect is that — probably for legal reasons — the play does not take sides. The house maid as well as the DSK-character come across as manipulative, and it's not clear whom to believe.

In reality, the criminal case brought by Guinean-born housekeeper Diallo was dropped after prosecutors said they couldn't trust her. Among their concerns: She was inconsistent about her actions right after leaving his suite, and she told a compelling but false story of having been raped previously.

In truth, no one apart from the two parties concerned will ever really know what exactly happened in that now-infamous suite 2806.

After seemingly endless speculation, many in France, not least Strauss-Kahn and his now-estranged wife, journalist Anne Sinclair, just want to move on.

Strauss-Kahn will find out on Wednesday if his demand to have charges of aggravated pimping in a case in France thrown out. If he succeeds, this and a secret civil settlement last week between himself and Diallo that closed the American case may draw some sort of symbolic line under Strauss-Kahn's woes.

In a sign that others are moving on, even a proposed film with French box-office golden boy Gerard Depardieu in the leading role was cancelled after French producers got cold feet.

Meanwhile, Strauss-Kahn is making cautious attempts to rehabilitate his professional reputation. He's now giving speeches at international conferences and has set up a consulting company in Paris.

But the director of the play sees another potential option for the man nicknamed "the great seducer."

"I don't know," says Hersen, "maybe he'll end up being an actor."

___

"Suite 2806" runs in the Daunou Theater in Paris until Jan. 19.

_____

Thomas Adamson can be followed at http://Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

News from © The Associated Press, 2012
The Associated Press

  • Popular kamloops News
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile