THEATRE PREVIEW
CHRIS COURTENAY AND "WELDON
RISING" AT DIVERSIONARY THEATRE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine April
1997
What she teaches is ABC; what she directs is no child's play. But there is a through-line in the life of
Christina Courtenay. As an actor,
director and first-grade teacher, what she loves most is presenting challenging
material that makes people think.
"I like working with anything that keeps the audience off
guard," says the quick-talking, quick-thinking 50 year-old, and you know
she brings that energy and philosophy into the classroom, too. She has a huge following of former students,
and a devoted theater audience as well.
It all started back in Kansas City, when, at age 6, she saw Mary
Martin's traveling production of “Peter Pan”.
"For years," Courtenay admits, "I believed in Peter Pan
just like Santa. I became
obsessed. I memorized all the words,
rewrote the script, and produced the play in my backyard, including lighting
and sound."
Three years ago, everything came full circle. The Lemon Avenue School mounted a mammoth
production of “Peter Pan”, involving the entire student population -- 500
kids. The script they used was a
"beefed-up" version of Courtenay's age 6 original.
By the time she was 8, Courtenay knew she wasn't in Kansas any
more. The first big move was to Laguna
Beach, and then Escondido to the family ranch, where she grew up riding horses
and climbing trees. "Plenty of
time for my imagination," she says, "and make-believe stuff carries
you over to theater." She acted in
junior high and high school productions, then at Palomar College and SDSU.
But then, she left the theater for fifteen years, "and I still
don't know why." She got married
at 23 (divorced at 37), had two kids and started teaching in 1970. But she never forgot her father's words to
her, as he lay in a hospital bed following an accident, having broken almost
every bone in his body. "Through a
respirator, he said to me, 'Be true to yourself.'" And she has been.
When she re-entered community theater, and was acting in “Watch on
the Rhine”, she fell in love with her onstage husband, Jim Johnston, whom she
married in 1989. Over the years,
they've acted together several times (most recently in “King Lear” at the
Fritz, where she played the title role and he played Kent). He's directed her, she's directed him, and
he's designed sound for all her productions.
Courtenay is very careful about the theater work she chooses. Given her commitment to teaching, she can
only do three plays a year: two as
director and one as actor.
She confesses that "most theater I like I don't understand
the first time I read it. What I like
may be a little weird, ribald and strange on the surface. But they also have to be really moral
pieces. I like them to go at the
audience in the exact opposite direction, to get them to think. Call it my Celtic black humor."
That description aptly applies to some of her best work, from her
mind- and gender-bending Master's project production of “Cloud 9” at SDSU in
1991, to her chillingly wonderful direction at the Fritz Theatre, which she
considers her home: “The Baltimore
Waltz”, “Coyote Ugly”, “The Living” and “Hot 'n' Throbbing”.
And now, she adds to her growing list of quirky credits with
“Weldon Rising” (Diversionary Theatre, April 4-May 10) by Phyllis Nagy, a piece
that contains all Courtenay's favorite theatrical elements: dark humor, thought-provoking themes, and a
non-narrative, non-linear form.
"At first it seemed so dark and sad," she says of the
apocalyptic tale, "but the more I read it, the funnier it gets. It's purgatory comedy. Like “No Exit” with 26 cases of beer... The play is about fear and loss, and also
about hope, love and the human spirit."
“Weldon Rising” takes place on a back street in New York's
meat-packing district on the hottest evening of the year. The characters are two gay men, two
lesbians, a "stunning young transvestite without a permanent address"
and a "very young... beautiful and dangerous boy" [author's
notes]. Four of them (including the
self-effacing Natty Weldon) witnessed a hate crime and did nothing to stop it.
There's a lot about courage and cowardice, beauty and violence,
men and women, and the schisms in the gay community and in our society at
large. The specter of AIDS is a
shadowy, unspoken presence.
"This hate crime kicked off the end of the world," says
Courtenay. "The temperature goes
up to 180. Buses and cars explode. Bridges collapse. It's so purgatorial, in style and tone, that these people could
all be dead, and they could've watched this awful act ten or a hundred years
before, and they're still trying to work it out, trying to make meaning out of
an event with no reason... It's not
just about gay issues; it's about multicultural issues and isolationism,
separation and pulling together."
Playwright Nagy, a New Yorker living in London, also wrote “Girl
Bar” (coming to Diversionary in July, just after its 10th anniversary coup --
the San Diego premiere of Terrence McNally's “Love! Valor! Compassion!”).
"I love working at Diversionary," says Courtenay, who
won acclaim for her performance last year in “Why We Have a Body”. "The audience is right with you. It breathes with you... In this play, they have to be able to see
terrible things and laugh. It has to be
laughter and tears, laughter and tears."
©1997 Patté Productions Inc.