THEATRE REVIEW:
“THE LAST YANKEE”
by San Diego Actors Theatre at the Garden Cabaret Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: November 9, 1994
In "The
Last Yankee," Arthur Miller drops all sorts of bombs all over the stage;
then he runs away. Big Issues explode,
but no one stays around to pick up the pieces or attempt to put them together. As he nears 80, maybe the Pulitzer Prize-winning
playwright is trying to cram everything into every new work. This 70-minute, 1993 play is all over the
place. But in its San Diego premiere,
it's nestled into a pleasant outdoor setting, the Garden Cabaret in Mission
Hills.
For San Diego
Actors Theatre, it's a multi-level event.
The local premiere of an Arthur Miller play. A unique, new performing space.
And the onset of their tenth anniversary season, after a two-year
mainstage production hiatus. This
offering is cause for company celebration.
Director Wayne
Tibbetts and his cast manage to navigate this mini-minefield of a play with
aplomb. The piece takes place in a
public New England psychiatric institution.
The spotlight is on two female patients and their husbands. Both women are suffering from
depression. No one really knows why, in
either case, but there is a huge amount of speculation, including the
suggestion that "anybody with any sense is depressed in this
country."
More to the
point of the play, though, what do these women have in common that
brought them to the same place with the same symptomatology? Karen has no children; Patricia has
seven. Patricia has money problems;
Karen has none. Patricia's husband, who
hopes he's “The last Yankee” of the title, is descended from Alexander
Hamilton, but he's a carpenter who isn't overly ambitious. Karen's husband is a self-made businessman,
a workaholic. This is Patricia's third
time as an inpatient in fifteen years; she's ready to go home. It's Karen's first incarceration; she's more
frightened, and much more heavily medicated.
Both women struggle to understand, not to blame, to find a little moment
of happiness, to fit into their skins and their marriages.
As the
interactions between the couples take center stage, we see that this play is
less about depression than disappointment.
About failure to meet expectations.
And about the games played out and replayed in a relationship. Men not understanding. Women backing them into a corner from which
they cannot escape successfully.
The
performances are generally understated, well tempered. The space is used to good effect; the
audience is very close to the action.
Tibbetts isn't afraid of quiet, awkward moments. But why he had two white-clad hospital attendants
crossing the stage from time to time, doing nothing, is totally unclear. The catatonic patient in bed was a kind of
frightening addition, though. I was
close enough to try on her slippers.
Meanwhile,
center-stage, the four actors do a masterful job. Ann Richardson is magnificent, in a finely nuanced performance as
Karen, a terrified older woman, spewing non sequiturs and laughing maniacally,
putting on spangled shorts, a top-hat and tap shoes and achingly trying to sing
and dance. Doug Waldo gives a simple,
unadorned performance and is, as always, quite believable. Robert Larsen is much more controlled than
usual, though his character is obviously seething underneath. The role of Patricia, played by Patricia
Elmore Costa, is the least interpretable.
She's a bundle of contradictions -- as written and played -- and it's
not easy to buy her buoyancy given a history of depression and Swedish
genes. The Boston accents come and go
in the men; somewhat enigmatically, there are no accents in the women. The inconsistency is unnerving.
But the
production overall is quite engaging.
The play may be flawed, but it's a nice stretch for Elmore Costa's
company. Happy Anniversary, San Diego
Actors Theatre. And welcome back!
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1994 Patté Productions Inc.