THEATRE
PREVIEW
“THE KENTUCKY
CYCLE” AT SDSU THEATRE
Published in
KPBS On Air Magazine November 1998
It won the Pulitzer Prize, and the Los Angeles
Drama Critics Circle Award, and was nominated for five Tony Awards. So how come no one came to see it on
Broadway?
“The Kentucky Cycle”, a mammoth, two-part,
six-hour epic, was the first play in history to win a Pulitzer without having
been produced in New York. It won raves
in Seattle and L.A., but when it premiered in New York in 1993, no one came,
and it closed in less than a month. It
was up against “Angels in America”, which won all the Tonys for epic theater
that year, and if people were going to choose an epic to see, it would more
likely be a contemporary one than one about the travails of the Appalachian
Kentucky proletariat.
Their loss.
Robert Schenkkan’s “The Kentucky Cycle” has been called “enormously
engrossing” (N.Y. Newsday), “one of the biggest, boldest and most important
works the American theater has produced in recent years” (Houston Chronicle),
“a gripping, garrulous metaphor for the violent history of our nation and in a
larger sense, a history of mankind” (Los Angeles Times).
And now, finally, it appears in San Diego, not at
one of the Big theaters, but in an unlikely, ambitious place: the Drama Department of SDSU. Associate Professor Nick Reid (best known to
San Diego theatergoers for his inventive scenic design -- at the Globe, the
Rep, Lamb’s and others), directs.
“I looked at some smaller plays,” Reed
confessed. “But I love epic theater,
the stripped-down, open staging, moving through time and space. I found the script poetic and emotional. I went back and forth about whether to
present one part or both, and finally decided I had to do both, to complete the
story.”
The story is a sprawling 200-year history of
Kentucky’s Cumberland Plateau (1775-1997), laid out in nine episodic one-act
plays. Swept along through Indian wars,
family feuds, land grabs and strip mining, we witness a tale of perfidy, blood,
rape and desecration of the land. We
are forced to see ourselves as a violent nation awash in denial and
destruction.
“Each of the plays can stand on its own,” Reed
explains, “but the characters continue through, with lots of twists and
unexpected turns in the story. What’s
interesting about the piece, is that it’s really about relationships and
commitment to family, whether they’re right or wrong. There’s also a powerful revenge motif, and a very strong
environmental statement, about how industrialization devastated the land, and
destroyed a way of life.”
SDSU has never done anything of this scope: two
repertory productions, with 19 actors portraying 72 characters. Audience members can see the parts on
consecutive nights or back-to-back in an all-day marathon.
“This is the underbelly of American history,” says
Reed. “But everyone who’s ever seen it has considered it one of those
‘changed-my-life’ kind of experiences.”
As Everett Evans put it in the Houston Chronicle,
“This is much more than must-see theatergoing.
One almost feels it should be required reading in high school and
college American history courses.”
A dim, dark mirror is held up to America, and
everyone should look.
©1998
Patté Productions Inc.