THEATRE
PREVIEW
RON LINK ON
“JAKE’S WOMEN”
Published
in KPBS On Air Magazine March 1990
They hang around dinner theaters and Equity
houses, nodding and scratching, looking for a fix. Sometimes they stalk the video stores, hoping to feed their
habit. They don't have to look too far. They are Simon addicts, joke junkies hooked
on the high they get from that prolific, punning playwright, Neil Simon.
Simon
has fed this addiction for the past 29 years with nearly 45 stage and screen
plays. After last year's premiere of
"Rumors" at the Old Globe Theatre, Simon’s back in
"It's terribly autobiographical,” Link
said during a phone interview from his
It's not just a man's play, says Link, and
it's not about men owning women, despite the possessive form of the title.
"Women can relate to this as well as
men. Because everyone is attracted to
success, power and money. They have an
almost sensual attraction. And we live
with the fallacy that once you have success and money, you have no other
problems. Jake learns that he's
terribly self-obsessed -- with his career, with his life, with his first
wife. There are things here that we
all feel. How much do our relationships
fill up the void in our lives? In one
scene with his girlfriend, Jake says, 'I want my life back. I don't want my work to be my life.'"
What Link likes about this play is that it
harks back to Simon's earlier work.
It's similar to "Chapter Two" in being intimate and revealing,
and like the Brighton-Biloxi-Broadway
trilogy, it's "reminiscent and funny, yet not sad. It has you laughing and crying. Neil lets his melancholy show."
“Rumors” (now in its 14th month on Broadway),
Simon's first farce, departs from the usual addictive mélange of melancholy and
comedy. Link is glad the old Simon is
back for "Jake."
"In the play, Jake is trying to sort out
his life, and Neil manages to dish up psychology as something funny. Through self-delving and exploration, Jake
comes to be able to give himself over to his present woman, rather than
thinking only about his past relationships, and over-idealizing his first
wife. These are clearly the reflections
of a man heading toward health."
Link has no difficulty relating to the
conflicts and concerns of the play.
"I'm as interested in self-exploration as any audience member. That's the glorious thing about most of
Neil's plays; it's always like you up there.
It's universal. This is about
the voyage toward a better life. I'm
just at a different point in my voyage.
Neil is 60 or 61; I'm 47."
Link's voyage has taken him halfway around the
world. He's internationally known for
directing the Australian premiere productions of Simon's "Brighton Beach
Memoirs." And he's done regional
theater all over the
Neil
Simon was in the audience last year when Ron Link staged "Stand-Up
Tragedy" at the Mark Taper Forum.
He liked what he saw, and called Link to discuss working on a project
together. They're now on the seventh
draft of "Jake's Women."
During rehearsals, there will probably be a good deal more massaging of
the script, Link says with anticipation, "because Neil's famous for
writing for particular actors' voices and rhythms."
Simon has already paced his words to the
cadence of Joyce van Patten (who appeared in "Rumors" and
"Broadway Bound" before joining "Jake's Women"). But he's never written for a non-mainstream
actor like Peter Coyote, who plays the title role in "Jake." And Ron Link represents something of a
directorial departure as well. In the
past, Simon has stuck with the same directors, primarily Mike Nichols and Gene
Saks. Link is different.
"I'm an eclectic director... On the left,
I've done very visceral, hard-edged works, and on the right, things almost
lyrical, poetic. What's miraculous and
wonderful is Neil coming to "Stand-Up Tragedy" and seeing a different
direction. And Peter Coyote playing
Jake -- that goes along with Neil's reasons for changing directors and
directions... certainly a left-of-center choice."
Link has "a kind of surreal vision"
of the play. He says that Simon himself
considers this piece "a little more adventurous, which means more work
that the audience will have to do."
That'll probably be just fine with Neil Simon's fanatic following. They're already hooked.
* * *
"Jake's
Women" opens March 8 at the Old Globe Theatre, with previews from March
3-7. The play runs through April 15
and opens on Broadway April 30.
©1990 Patté
Productions Inc.