THEATRE REVIEWS:
"FLYIN' WEST" at
the San Diego Repertory Theatre
and
"DIAMONDS" at SDSU
KPBS AIRDATE: SEPTEMBER 28, 1994
Onstage this week, it's a field day for
America's two favorite pastimes:
baseball and melodrama.
If you didn't know that 'fan' was short for
'fanatic' and you're having withdrawal symptoms since the strike, you won't
want to miss "Diamonds," a musical revue about bats, stats, bunts and
the boys of summer, having its West coast premiere at San Diego State
University.
As anyone who treasures the game will tell
you, baseball is a metaphor for life, and this little show covers all the
bases. With lesser-known contributions
from some very well-known composers and lyricists -- such as Kander and Ebb,
Comden and Green, Menken and Zippel -- we are taken from the backyard sandlot
to a Kabuki "Casey at the Bat," from the Black Sox to the brilliantly
immortal Abbott and Costello routine, "Who's On First." Throughout
the proceedings, a Ted Leitner impersonator recounts all of American history as
a sports cast. From the Yanks against
the Rebs on up to the Cold War Series, Yanks vs. the Reds.
Some of it is funny, some poignant, some
sentimental, but it's a great vehicle for student actors, and director Paula
Kalustian scores a home-run with the Drama Department's first production of the
season. The audience sits in bleachers,
the action takes place on an Astroturf playing field, and the chorus of vendors
sells hotdogs and ginger-beer during the show.
The talent lineup is competent, but there's a noticeable absence of
representatives of the Negro Leagues.
Standout performances are delivered by Sean Bernardi and Michael
Dalager. Kalustian has cut a number of
segments from the original, but for a non-fan, it's still a long run around the
bases. For series-starved die-hards,
though, this show is a winner.
Speaking of dying hard, consider the Old
West, through dark glasses. Pearl
Cleage's "Flyin' West" takes place in the all-black township of
Nicodemus, Kansas, about the turn of the century. As in many contemporary African American plays, the women fare
far better than the men. Here we meet
three pretty powerful women who've made their way westward to freedom and land
ownership. Sophie shares a homestead with her sister Fannie and Miss Leah, a
wise old former slave. Then youngest
sister Minnie appears with her uppity, self-loathing, mulatto husband,
Frank.
Frank has evil designs on his wife's share of the land; always trying to
"pass," he sides with the greedy white land speculators who threaten
to destroy the black haven Sophie is working so hard to preserve. The plays' problems come in the facile
elimination of the villainous, wife-beating Frank. In true melodrama style, the audience complies with enthusiastic
appreciation of his demise. Outside in
the lobby, meanwhile, history seems very close to present-day reality, in the
stark, disturbing photographs of Donna
Ferrato, an exhibit called "Living With the Enemy" which shows that
it isn't quite so easy for abused wives to dispatch their husbands.
But back onstage, bathos aside, the play is
potent and the six-person ensemble is equally strong. Director Floyd Gaffney provokes audience blood-lust in the second
act, but he has otherwise mounted a moving and memorable production. Sylvia M'Lafi Thompson is a shotgun-wielding
powerhouse as Sophie and Irma P. Hall, playing a crotchety old character that
harks back to her wondrous performance in "Jar the Floor" at the Old
Globe, is, once again, an irresistible, sinewy-but-soft, gospel-singing
force.
Playwright Pearl Cleage reminds us that the
winning of the West wasn't all lily-white.
This page of history, rarely read, deserves to be seen.
I'm
Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1994 Patté Productions
Inc.