THEATRE
REVIEW:
“SOMEONE WHO’LL WATCH OVER ME” at the North Coast Repertory Theatre
& “TWILIGHT OF THE GOLDS” at the Sweetooth Theatre & “BOOMERS” at the Lamb’s Players Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: January 31, 1996
In my opinion,
theater is most effective when it makes you think. And it goes even further, and deeper, when it makes you think,
‘What would I have done?’ Questions
of philosophical significance are being posed on two San Diego stages, in Frank
McGuinness’ “Someone Who’ll Watch over Me” at North Coast Repertory Theatre,
and in Jonathan Tolins’ “Twilight of the Golds” at Sweetooth Comedy Theatre. One transports us to a tiny prison cell in
Beirut, where three hostages are battling for their psychological
survival. The other asks how far
science should go to improve on the natural order of life. The themes seem rather portentous, but both
plays are laced with laughter.
That’s where
Sweetooth’s production loses its steam.
Especially in the first act, the humor is New York Jewish, fast and
furious. Director Margo Essman has
shepherded her flock along some pokey pathway, and encouraged them all to chew
their lines like cud. So many
punchlines were swallowed, I thought I was at amateur night at the Comedy
Store. There is, overall, a vast age
discrepancy in the cast, with the older generation being quite credible, and
the younger set being uniformly miscast.
These kids aren’t sharp enough, quick enough, Jewish enough, to make the
younger Gold family come alive. They do
their best in the heavier scenes, as when gay son confronts homophobic father,
but in general, I just couldn’t believe they were who they were supposed to be.
George Flint
puts in the cast’s strongest performance as the doting father who loves his
kids but can’t quite accept who they’ve become. Sue Kaye has some moments as the smothering mother. But the pregnant yuppie daughter and her
geneticist husband don’t ring true. Nor
does the play’s centerpiece, the opera-loving gay son who, against a backdrop
of Wagner music and themes, is recalling the horror-story of how he broke with
his family. There is too little Wagner
here, and too little passion.
But that
doesn’t dim the play’s powerful hypothetical situation, not extremely
futuristic, wherein you can know all kinds of things before your baby is born;
in this case, that he will very likely be homosexual. Given the freedom of reproductive choice, How close is this to
Nazi eugenics? If a family rejects a
gay baby, what does that tell its gay son? What are the implications for
bigotry, evolution, morality and society?
Clearly, the play is more provocative than the production, but it’s well
worth a look nonetheless.
The same goes
for North Coast Rep’s “Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me.” Again, the dilemma is crystalline, but the emotional layer is
never more than skin deep. Three
disparate men, from different backgrounds and countries, are chained to the wall
of a cinder-block cell, struggling to maintain their sanity and humanity.
As the
Irishman, Edward, Ron Choularton steals the show, with humor and bravado thinly
cloaking sheer terror. As Adam, the
American, Douglas Reger is less clearly defined. And Punit Auerbacher, as the prissy and pedantic Englishman,
isn’t prissy enough, and the arc of his character’s dramatic change lacks
lucidity. The final scene should be
touching to the point of tears, but, devoid of our emotional engagement, it
falls short of the great theatrical moment it should be.
And now, a
quick post-script recommendation. No
great theatrical moments in the Lamb’s Players revisit of “Boomers,” but it’s
as fun and poignant and buoyant as it was the first time. Doug Waldo is a great addition as the
persnickety professor, superciliously analyzing the Baby Boomer
generation. No plotline here, but it’s
a deliciously homegrown production, and a thrilling musical trip down memory
lane, with a terrific backup band.
Don’t miss it.
I'm Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.