THEATRE PREVIEW
MARK
HARELIK
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine September
1992
He always
thought country music was "irritating, repetitive and revolting. The music of stupid, ignorant
hicks." Now Mark Harelik is
starring in a country-musical he co-wrote:
“
Growing up in a
rural, central
"His
poetry was so simple. His style and his
words go straight to the heart. The
very thing I despised early on -- the notion of music of the ignorant -- is
what makes his music so appealing. It's
ingenuous, sincere, unaffected. He's
completely trustworthy, so you make yourself completely vulnerable. You know that someone is speaking strictly
from the voice of his pain, directly to the part of your body that understands
pain."
Hank Williams
had his share of pain. His meteoric
rise to fame lasted only four years, from 1948-52. By 1953, at age 29, he was dead, a victim of his addictions and
his stardom. He left behind a timeless
musical legacy, songs like "Hey, Good Lookin', "Your Cheatin'
Heart" and "I Can't Help it if I'm Still in Love with You."
These songs
resurface in “Lost Highways”, conceived in 1979 as a musical revue which
Harelik performed as a student at PCPA Theaterfest in
The script has
been "substantially revised" for the Globe production. But it remains "a Hank Williams
concert, a performance piece with connecting text,” Harelik explains. "A dream play-slash-performance piece."
Getting the
performance right is important. Harelik
plays the guitar, and his three band members, representing Williams' Drifting
Cowboys, are musically talented actors who play steel guitar, upright bass and
fiddle. Half the cast of twelve has
been associated with the production before.
Myler directs once again.
Does Harelik
capture the country master? "I
certainly don't sound like Hank Williams," he confesses. "But there's a spirit and flavor and a
piercing whine that I can achieve with some degree of success. And fortunately, Hank was no genius on
guitar."
His genius
wasn't in his melodies either, says Harelik, but in his words and his
style. "Hank was emotionally
crippled in his offstage life. But
onstage his emotional handicap became his stock in trade. The reason he came to people's attention was
because he suffered so well. We all
need somebody to suffer for us. The
trouble is, they're really suffering, while we're grateful for the
commiseration. Hank had a need for
recognition, a need to prove that he wasn't white trash, wasn't as ignorant as
what he sang about... It's a picture of an American archetype. Elvis.
Janis Joplin. Judy Garland. An innocent songbird made to sing until it
dies in captivity. His drive was
matched by what the public gave him access to.
It was a fatal combination... We
hunger for these people, and demand their native gift. They need to do what they do, and we need to
see it. We cheer their
self-destruction."
Harelik shares
little with his musical subject, except a Southern upbringing. Not the lack of education (Harelik attended
the
At 41, Harelik
sounds pretty self-satisfied. He just
got married last month, he's acted in over a hundred musicals and straight
plays, appearing at prestigious venues such as the Mark Taper Forum, American
Conservatory Theatre, South Coast Rep, the Old Globe (he starred in “Kiss Me,
Kate” in 1984) and the La Jolla Playhouse (he was a convincing Lopakhin in “The
Cherry Orchard” in 1990 and a powerful “Elmer Gantry” in 1991).
He's been doing
just what he wants: confining his
acting to this coast, working with Sidney Lumet on the screenplay of “The
Immigrant”, while completing its stage sequel, hoping for an active future life
for “Lost Highways”. What's his
professional fantasy? "This is
it," he says of his multifaceted involvement in “Highways” -- as
conceiver, writer, lead actor/singer, musical coordinator. "I'm completely busy and very
happy. I don't feel that I'm singing in
a cage."
©1992
Patté Productions Inc.