THEATRE
REVIEW:
“ACCIDENTAL DEATH OF AN ANARCHIST” at SDSU & “EDMOND” by Alien Stage Project at Ensemble Arts Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: October 1, 1997
The timing is
impeccable. On the heels of the 20th
anniversary of the poorly explained death of Steven Biko, hero of the
anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, and in the shadow of last month’s
sexually assaulting police brutality of New York’s finest, the San Diego State
University Drama Department has mounted “Accidental Death of an
Anarchist.” Dario Fo’s 1970 political
satire exposes, often very humorously, the corruption, oppression and
incompetence of law enforcement officers. Fo’s play was inspired by a 1969
bombing incident in Italy, but it could be here; it could be anywhere: Soweto,
NY. L.A. Even San Diego. The billy-club beat goes on.
In the play,
part political treatise, part courtroom drama, part Keystone Kops, a maniacal
master of disguises maneuvers his way into a police station. Before long, he has become a professor of
psychiatry, an Elvis impersonator, a Scottish Highlander, John Wayne, and
ultimately, an oddly Southern-accented chief investigator who puts the
Constable, the Inspector and the Superintendent on trial for the death of a
revolutionary who fell inexplicably from a fourth story window while in police
custody.
This was a
spectacular vehicle for playwright Fo, an agile mime and improviser. The central character requires an actor of
great versatility, and SDSU has found the perfect guy in Nick Spear, a
chameleon who effortlessly jumps in and out of the action -- not to mention
multiple disguises and accents. He is
surrounded by a delightfully minimalist set and wonderfully stylized whiteface
makeup painted onto on a pretty strong supporting cast which highlights the
humor and updates the politics with references to Tienanmen Square, Steve Biko
and Rodney King. Of course, most of
these heinous acts occurred after the play was written, but no
matter. Director Peter Larlham has
certainly maintained the spirit of the piece, which unfortunately gets more
preachy and more muddled in the second act, and drags in the requisite female
journalist who is a rather un-PC, unsympathetic and unconvincing
character.
Speaking of
misogyny, an early David Mamet play is getting a very respectable airing
courtesy of Alien Stage Project.
“Edmond,” a provocative but repetitive and also preachy 1982 piece, is
well paired with a brief Mamet skit, “Australia,” as opener. Both concern men gone amok, and guess who
gets the shaft, or the knife? Women are
mere accessories in Mametland, either banished altogether or limited to the
roles of sex object or punching bag. As
the playwright himself put it, not long after he wrote “Edmond,” “Women have,
in men’s minds, such a low place on the social ladder in this country that it’s
useless to define yourself in terms of a woman. What men need is men’s approval.”
Edmond is an unhappily
married man who goes off into the cold, cruel night and encounters the slime
beneath many big-city rocks. Obsessively seeking connection, solace and sex, he
spends many of his 23 short scenes getting bogged down in the boring financial
details of procuring sex. He finally
gets it free, but feels compelled to demean and brutalize his newfound mate
nonetheless. Ultimately, he meets his
own brutal destiny, or at least he spends the last few, plodding minutes of the
play discussing destiny, before he settles down to a “safe” life with
the much-desired men’s approval.
It isn’t a
pretty piece; it manages, as many Mamet plays do, to leave you feeling both
angry and misanthropic. This is no
place for lily-livered Pollyannas. But
if this is the kind of bleak, rank worldview you covet in the theater, then
Michael Hemmingson’s well-orchestrated production will leave an appropriately
bitter taste in your mouth. Jeremy
Shepard does a fine job as the nasty title character, and the rest of the cast
supports him well, with standout performances, in multiple roles, by Jeannine
Torres and Donnell Wesley. You get to
choose this week, whether you want your societal commentary served up with
candy corn or with arsenic.
I’m Pat Launer
for KPBS radio.
©1997 Patté Productions Inc.