THEATRE PREVIEW
LISA KRON IN “2.5 MINUTE
RIDE” AT LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine October 1996
Lisa Kron started out in straight theater ("mostly playing
old ladies and next-door neighbors"), which is kinda funny, since she
might have been the only Jewish lesbian in Lansing, Michigan, or maybe the only
lesbian Jew.
"I always had a queer sensibility," she admits. "I wasn't pretty and I wasn't getting
much attention. So I developed my
personality. I set out to be the
funniest girl in the world."
She parlayed her humor into a cottage industry, and this month,
she's featured at the La Jolla Playhouse in the world premiere of her latest
multi-character monologue, “2.5 Minute Ride” (through October 27).
She's been in San Diego before, with the acclaimed performance
group, "The Five Lesbian Brothers," of which she is a founding
member. Her girlfriend Peggy is also
one of the 'Brothers.' The group's most
recent collaborative work, “The Secretaries”, a story about "a cult of
SlimFast-drinking, long-nailed secretaries," won an Obie Award in New
York. The Brothers' book of humor will
be published next year.
"We try to walk this interesting line," the affable, 35
year-old Kron explains. "Something
campy in style, with sight gags and goofy names, often has a dark emotional
reality underneath.
"My own style is very different. The Brothers' work is edgier and a little darker than mine, but
in both, there's the belief that by using humor, you can allow the audience to
think about things they haven't thought before. What's really funny always has tragic elements."
Unlike her prior monologues, “2.5 Minute Ride” deals with a real
tragedy. It was inspired by a trip Kron
took three years ago with her father, "a 72 year-old blind diabetic
Holocaust survivor with a heart condition." They visited his hometown in Germany and went to Auschwitz in
Poland. In 1937, her father was rescued
by "Kindertransport," which spirited Jewish children out of Germany.
Kron intersperses descriptions of this poignant and
heart-wrenching journey with highly comic descriptions of her family's annual
trek to the Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio, where her father
loves to ride the roller coaster. The
outrageous coaster-ride lasts the titular 2.5 minutes.
"We laughed at everything in our family," says
Kron. And in this piece, you can see
why. She describes her family
oxymoronically as "Midwestern bohemians."
Kron's mother, a Presbyterian convert, saves everything, including
egg cartons, for the Senior Center. She
lives by the motto: Never go anywhere
you have to wear pantyhose. Lisa's
grandmother buys tons of Avon products, because she feels sorry for the Avon
lady. Her father would prefer to live
in a stainless steel house with a drain in the middle. And when her brother introduces his fiancée
to Lisa and Peggy, Lisa "wanted them to know we accept them even though
they're straight."
Kron loves to turn the universe on its ear.
In her previous monologues, “101 Humiliating Stories,”, “All My Hopes and Dreams” and “Facing Life's
Problems”, she focused on matters of sexuality and the exclusion of minority
groups from popular entertainment. Kron
calls her work "womanist lesbian humor," but adds, "I never
write to make a political point. I'm
more interested in writing that asks questions than answers them."
When the Best of Manhattan '93 Awards were handed out, Kron was
named Best Stand-Up Comedienne. She's
performed her pieces in prestigious New York venues, including Lincoln Center's
Serious Fun! Festival, P.S. 122, La Mama, the Bottom Line and the New York
Theatre Workshop, as well as non-mainstream regional locations (such as Sushi
in San Diego). The Village Voice found her to be "intimate, disarmingly
unpretentious and decisively on-target with her observations of life."
"When you do autobiographical solo performance work,"
says the 12-year veteran of the genre, "the goal is not to tell about
yourself, but to use that to illuminate universal experience. This new work in progress is specifically
about my father and what happened to him, the loss he suffered. But in a much larger sense, it concerns how
humor and tragedy are present in every experience. I know from early [New York] readings that it affects people;
they see their own family in it. It's
about loss and letting go, and wanting to take care of your parents...
"While being respectful of the Holocaust, I'm also interested
in breaking into the reverence. It's
become increasingly impossible to talk about it in any meaningful way. It didn't carry the weight in those people's
minds that it does now. It's
interesting for me to see this person who lived through these major events, but
he's just a regular guy with a day-to-day life... My father wasn't in a camp himself. So he has a lot of optimism, a philosophical view of things he
might not have been able to retain if he had been in a camp."
Maybe that freed her to use comedy to tell his story. "It's very important to me that there's
humor in it," the writer says of “2.5 Minute Ride”. But she still treats her subject with
respect; she rejected a friend's suggested title of “Holocoaster”.
When her father attended an early reading, he reportedly
"laughed his head off." Both
parents will be here for the La Jolla production. And Kron is glad. "I
feel this piece is a tribute to my family."
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.