THEATRE REVIEW:
“APOCALYPTIC BUTTERFLIES” at the
North Coast Repertory Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: August 24, 1994
1988 must have
been a lean theater year in Chicago.
That was when Wendy MacLeod's "Apocalyptic Butterflies" was
hailed by the Chicago Tribune as one of the ten best productions of the season. You know, they get squirrelly in those cold
climates...
Maybe in the
waning days of winter, around holiday-time, when you're sick of carols and
candy-coated corn onstage, you might be ready for a serio-comic drama about a
couple, their unnamed 7 week-old baby, their parents, an extramarital affair
and a strange and unwanted Christmas present of totem poles. Maybe.
But in the dying days of summer... I don't know. Everything about this production seemed... unseasonable.
North Coast
Repertory Theatre has taken some chances in the past, with gay or political
plays, nude scenes and some potentially controversial choices. But they do love the light stuff, too. And sometimes, they excel with it. But this is a fluff-piece on a disturbing
theme, that here, under the direction of Vinny Ferelli, is handled all
wrong. Screechy at times, preachy at
others, too fatuous or erroneous or unvaried in tone. He isn't helped by the play, which is too serious to be quirky
and gets too silly to be taken seriously.
At the center
is Hank Tater (are we to take it straight that his doddering father's name is,
quite inappropriately, Dick Tater?)
Anyway, Hank and Muriel had a baby.
But Hank won't hold it, or touch it or help come up with a name for it. Muriel is losing patience. She's also losing Hank, who takes comfort in
Trudi, who used to be known as Snaggle-tooth, until she reached puberty. Then no one seemed to look at her
teeth.
Anyway, Hank's
wise old mom gives sage advice, while his father gives weird Christmas
presents, like four thousand dollars worth of totem poles. Later, he pastes the multitudinous
butterflies of the title all over his trailer.
As for the apocalypse... Well,
it was pretty lame, and didn't work for me.
Maybe you're more of a believer.
As Hank, Mark
Taylor isn't certain who he is. He's
angry, that's for sure. He plays that
emotion excessively, but doesn't do well with the one or two others he
tries. We don't buy any tenderness from
him, or any sexuality --with mistress or wife -- though he's very
attractive. And he sometimes sounds
redneck/blue collar New York, while at other times, he sounds fairly civil and
educated, and oddly, uses words like 'irate' and 'primordial.' From the outset, he's too frenetic to Tracey
McNeil's too-torpid Muriel. As the
parents, Pat DiMeo and Jack Becker are much better cast and balanced. Becker is, in fact, the highlight of the
piece, with his delightfully dotty ingenuousness.
As the
well-endowed Trudi, Annette Murphy is inconsistent, but at her best, she's
believable as old Snaggle-Tooth AKA Tits, who's neurotic about life but casual
about sex, especially with married men.
All these parts don't add up to a satisfying whole. And holes there are a-plenty: in the plot, exposition and overall
conception.
Even Marty
Burnett's set design isn't up to his usual level, though the motel-room bed is
nicely done, and on a hot summer night, the snow looks pretty inviting. What this play needs is to take its own
advice: to create "a thing greater
than the thing itself." The
production's problem, just like Hank's, according to his father: it is "not transcendent."
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1994 Patté Productions Inc.