THEATRE PREVIEW
CYNTHIA STOKES DIRECTS "THE LAST NIGHT OF BALLYHOO" AT
NORTH COAST REPERTORY THEATRE
Published in
KPBS On Air Magazine November 1999
Young, Italian-Irish wannabe-opera singer directs
play about wartime Southern Jews. Seems
unlikely, but Cynthia Stokes is up to the task.
Actually, the 36 year-old Albuquerque native
hasn't wanted to be an opera singer for a long time. Instead, she's directed operas (in Houston, L.A. and San
Diego) as well as stage plays (in New York, New Jersey, Virginia,
Massachusetts, Minnesota and California).
And anyway, "The Last Night of Ballyhoo" is about a lot more than
wartime Southern Jews.
The second play by Alfred Uhry focuses on the same
social stratification as his Pulitzer and Oscar-winning "Driving Miss
Daisy": upper middle-class Atlanta, his family's home turf.
"Daisy" was played out against the civil rights movement. "Ballyhoo" is set against a
backdrop of Hitler, Christmas and Scarlett O'Hara.
It's December 1939, the eve of the premiere of
"Gone With the Wind," just before Ballyhoo, the 3-day series of
parties at the Jewish country club in Atlanta.
The event, exclusively for German Jews, is designed for young people to
hook up with the "right kind" of mate.
When the play opens, Lala Levy (a ditsy, neurotic
young socialite, still date-less for the big final dance) is decorating the
family Christmas tree. Her mother confronts her with stern disapproval:
"Jewish Christmas trees don't have stars."
And so begins a hilarious family comedy with
serious undertones and a passel of contradictions. These are Jews desperately
trying to look like good Southern Christians, ignoring what's going on in
Germany, immune to the anti-Semitism in their own neighborhood, and totally
disdainful of those "other Jews," the Eastern Europeans who are just
"too Jewish."
"Ballyhoo," which won a 1997 Tony Award
for Best Play and was a finalist for the Pulitzer, is, in Uhry's own words,
"about accepting your own ethnicity and who you are." People feeling
superior to their own kind," he once said, "is the stupidest kind of
bigotry. But it goes on all over the
world."
That universality makes Stokes feels she can
capably handle the play. After
graduating from the MFA program in directing at UCSD, she'd worked in New York
and various regional theaters, but then took time off to have two babies (now
age 4 months and 3 1/2 years). She'd
been away from the theater for awhile when North Coast Repertory Theatre
artistic director Sean Murray called to tell her he'd scored the Southern
California premiere of "Ballyhoo," and it'd be a great way for her to
get back to work.
"I was looking for a director that would be
new to San Diego audiences," says Murray, who frequently gives
undiscovered people a chance. "I knew she'd bring a smart intellect to the
play… This is not necessarily a holiday show, but it's set in December, and
it's something you can bring the whole family to. It's got entertainment value and it also deals with some pretty
interesting issues."
Stokes agrees.
"What I love about the play," says the vibrant, animated
brunette, "is that it has the frame of a comedy, but inside, this brutal
story of people experiencing spiritual poverty. To fit in, they've bent who they are, and that's a source of both
comedy and drama.
"The play is universal, although it seems
very particular. We all have the need
to belong. We all can assimilate to a
certain point. The question is, to what
extent do we do that? What parts do we give up? What are the things that we're not willing to give
up? It's the whole question of
identity. Who are you really? What makes you up?
"The horrifying thing is that these Jews,
despite their own outsider status, are promoting separatism themselves. This is so common. For every 'Us' there has to be a 'Them' -- even if it's part of
Us."
Stokes has also had Us-Them experiences. "I was in a situation where people
didn't know I was Italian. They
casually talked about wops. I was
horrified. That's what makes this play
so special. It's broad beyond its
theme. And I think it was brilliant of
Sean to put this right after "The Diary of Anne Frank." This is what America was thinking in 1939, but
the Jews in Berlin were thinking the same thing: this couldn't possibly
happen."
Stokes finds an irresistible challenge in the
world the playwright has created.
"Uhry has written seven really complex
characters. To me, they're almost
Chekhovian. Each of them has a hole inside, and later they find some
redemption. Maybe that's too
sentimental. But I think my job is to
keep the work honest, to tell this fabulous story making sure that everyone has
real needs and is playing for real stakes. I think we walk away seeing more of
ourselves in these characters than we thought at the beginning. As funny and extreme as they are, I see a
great deal of humanity in them. I
certainly see my family in the play.
This isn't just for Jews. I
think it's gonna be a really good night at the theater. And it's a perfect show
for the holidays. It's about filling
yourself with generosity of spirit. I
hope people leave this play moved a little bit, and come away feeling a little
more generous to others -- and to themselves."
©1999 Patté Productions Inc.