THEATRE REVIEW:
''THE SNOW BALL'' at the Old
Globe Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: MAY 16, 1991
For me, it could've been called "The
Snowflake," because it was light and delicate, lacy and lovely, but it melted
away into nothingness the minute you tried to touch it -- or let it touch you.
"The Snow Ball" is a beautiful
collaboration -- between the Old Globe Theatre and the Hartford Stage
Company. It's a lavish production,
lovingly directed by Jack O'Brien. The
look is gossamer; snow falling outside a huge free-standing window, strongly
suggestive of an old downtown Buffalo building. (And I know; I once lived there.) The lighting is dim, dappled with romantic shadows. The choreography, by the ever-creative
Graciela Daniele, is absolutely floats.
A wide marble staircase winds upward out of sight, as if something even
more romantic or thrilling were happening up above.
But neither the staircase nor the play
ultimately delivers. What you see is all
you get. It's pretty all right, but
emotionally, there's no one home.
This is the biggest piece Pete Gurney has
ever written. And though, like most of
his others, it deals with the American WASP experience, what it gains in size
and supposed scope, it loses in intimacy.
In "The Cocktail Hour" and
surely, in "Love Letters,” for example, Gurney gave us real emotional
moments, something to respond to, to choke up about. But here, it's all in the look, and while that part of the
production succeeds marvelously, it isn't a satisfying theatrical encounter.
We are confronted with the issues of
middle-aging, trying to turn back the clock, attempting to re-create an
unforgettable experience. Cooper Jones,
a fading realtor, and Lucy Dunbar, a full-bred upper-crust WASP who now works
in a bookstore, make elaborate plans to reunite their old chums and
everyone's favorite dancing couple, for one last Snow Ball, the annual
cotillion of their youth.
Along the way, they fall into nostalgic
reveries -- and into bed; they stage a generally successful event, the favorite
couple still dances well, though alas, she's terminally ill. In the end, everyone returns to his or her
place and sits back down, just as they were told to do at Van Dam's Dancing
School years ago. A little tattered and
frayed, perhaps, but everyone sits back down.
So what's the message? You can go home again -- sort
of? There's a universal in these
particulars, somewhere, but it just didn't strike any deep, resonant chords for
me. The melody, to extend the metaphor, didn't linger on.
But I liked watching it all, especially
Christopher Wells and Susan J. Coon as the Young Jack and Kitty, who barely
touched the expansive parquet floor, making ballroom dancing look like
effortless, silent, glider-plane flight.
The stable of Globe regulars -- Katherine
McGrath, Kandis Chappell, and Tom Lacy -- wrapped themselves warmly, as usual,
in their roles. And Deborah Taylor put
in a luscious little cameo performance.
I wanted to be swept away,
though. And I was barely moved. Maybe it's an age thing. Those slightly and significantly older than
I seemed to eat it up. That doesn't
mean I'm giving my age away on the air, but if nostalgia is your cup of Postum,
then waltz on over to the Old Globe.
I'm
Pat Launer, for KPBS radio.
©1991 Patté Productions
Inc.