THEATRE REVIEW:
“BEAU JEST” at the North Coast
Repertory Theatre & “OUR COUNTRY’S GOOD” at the San Diego State University
KPBS AIRDATE: March 5, 1997
There are those
who are separated from their families, and those who aren’t but wish they
were. And then there are those who are
forced to the part of those they aren’t.
Both thematic threads tie two very disparate plays, one comic and one
rather dramatic. Up at North Coast Rep,
there’s “Beau Jest,” and here on the San Diego State University campus, “Our
Country’s Good.”
Timberlake
Wertenbaker’s 1988 play-within-a-play takes place in 18th century Australia,
with the establishment of the first British penal colony. Purportedly for ‘their country’s good,’
these petty criminals and their keepers were sent 12,000 miles from home. Staunchly disagreeing with his peers, the
governor of this societal microcosm recommends rehabilitation over
flagellation; he suggests that the prisoners put on a play.
So, with its
cross-gender and multiple-casting, we see actors playing prisoners playing
officers, and a woman being made over by playing another woman who is playing a
man. Laugh-lines are interspersed with
acts of unspeakable prejudice and inhumanity.
There is social commentary on the brutal beginnings of modern Australia,
but most of all, on the redemptive and humanizing power of theater. It’s a very potent play.
Based loosely
on fact, and on Thomas Keneally’s novel, “The Playmaker,” the piece focuses on
Australia’s first theatrical production, George Farquhar’s restoration comedy,
“The Recruiting Officer.” When it first
opened in London, “Our Country’s Good” won the prestigious Olivier Award for
Best Play, and the Most Promising Playwright Prize for Wertenbaker.
In its SDSU
incarnation, the short scenes are choppy and the set pieces interfere with the
smooth progression of the piece. But
director Michael Harvey has elicited some very credible performances from his
cast of 10, playing 22 roles: notably, Chris Mangels as the socially conscious
governor and the would-be playwright; Terri Park as the empowered leading lady,
acting along with Janet Zaidman and Sheila Robin Roark, her partners in crime;
John Le Borgne as the Major and the hangman; and Dusty Engelbrecht as an
extravagant thespian-in-training. The
lighting and sound are especially well done, in the reconfigured Don Powell theatre,
where the audience sits on the stage and the acting is in the round.
If you, too,
believe in the splendor of words and the restorative power of theater, you’ll
catch “our Country’s Good” -- for your own good.
Now, much
closer to home, in geography and theme, is “Beau Jest,” a funny, fast-paced
1989 comedy by James Sherman, wherein a daughter can’t force herself to tell
her parents the truth. Sarah loves
Chris but he isn't Jewish; Miriam and Abe would never understand. So, instead of introducing him to her folks,
she calls an escort service and hires Bob Schroeder, who is thankfully an
actor, but name notwithstanding, regretfully not Jewish. However, relying on episodes of "St.
Elsewhere" and a stint in "Fiddler on the Roof," he successfully
impersonates Sarah's fantasy Jewish doctor.
Her boyfriend Chris doesn't like it, her brother Joel doesn't buy it,
but Mom and Dad are thrilled. You guess
who gets the girl.
Natascha
Nicolai is charmingly neurotic as Sarah.
And in Dan Gruber, we have a non-Jewish guy with a Jewish name playing a
non-Jewish guy with a Jewish name who’s playing a Jewish guy who doesn’t really
look very Jewish but manages to fool most of the family most of the time. You think that’s funny? It’s even funnier to watch. Gruber is hilarious with physical comedy,
and director Steve Gallion, who mined the vein of humor in Brecht’s “Mother
Courage” for the new Backbone Theatre, has spliced the verbal and physical
humor with razor-sharp timing. The
outcome is side-splitting. The two
dinner scenes alone are worth the price of admission.
Sue Kaye and
Daniel Mann are ‘poifect’ as the parents. If you’ve had or seen or known or
imagined a Jewish mother, she should live so long that you would take her to
see this show.
I’m Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1997 Patté Productions Inc.