THEATRE FEATURE/COMMENTARY:
NEW YORK ROUNDUP
KPBS AIRDATE: JULY 17, 1998
MUSIC: “Take Me Back to Manhattan”
Okay,
so by now, after all my time on KPBS, you’ve probably figured out that I’m a
native Noo Yawkah (Yo! wanna make somethin’ of it??). But I’ve been here for 20 years, and it had been way too long
since I visited my old stomping grounds.
So my husband and I took a bite out of the Big Apple.
I
want to tell you about the theater, of course, but first I have to tell you
about New York. I barely recognized
it. For one thing, it’s clean. Yup, that’s right. There’s no garbage on the street. And no homeless people, either.
I don’t know what Mayor Giuliani did to get rid of both of those
eyesores, but the thought of where they might be made me a little nervous. The
crime rate is also down, so locals actually feel safe on the streets. And this has created another shocking
change.
New
Yorkers are actually.... dare I say it?-- nice. They still push by you, but now they say ‘excuse me,’ even when
the streets are so crowded you’d think they were giving something away on the
next block.
Another
thing that’s changed is how people look. New Yorkers were always known for
haute couture, everyone now dresses like... well, San Diego. Sneakers, shorts, warmups, schmattas. I didn’t see one person who looked really
cool, hip or high-style. Not even in
the theater. They came in looking like
they were fresh from the beach or the ballfield. I guess people feel that, if
they’re plunking down up to 85 bucks to see a play, they can dress however they
damn please. Now that’s a New
York attitude.
I’d
forgotten what the City’s like at night -- teeming with people, even at 1
a.m. It’s so electric and
energizing. And there’s late-night
international eating; we went from Spanish one night to Burmese the next. But
the food was only preamble to the theater.
MUSIC: “Lullaby of Broadway”
This
has been one of the most active and successful theater seasons on Broadway, and
I chose to see the best of the best; five plays which together garnered a total
of 30 Tony Award nominations.
But
I have to say, in all honesty, with all the hoopla about Broadway productions,
there was nothing of a caliber that we couldn’t and don’t see here in San
Diego. The difference is when we’ll
see these theater works, and who’ll be in them. We always ultimately get the plays, sometimes in fine local
productions, but the biggies we won’t see for a long time, often years after
L.A. and usually performed by second or third-string road company casts.
That’s
partly due to the available theater spaces here, but also heavily attributable
to local audiences, which just don’t support the arts nearly as much as they
should, given the size and wealth of our community. Much smaller cities like Boston or San Francisco beat us out
every time. But we do often send
homegrown work to New York, though not this season.
Still,
there were some serious San Diego links, not the least of which was our native
son, Brian Stokes-Mitchell, who was up for Best actor in a musical, and who, in
my estimation, should have won -- for his dynamic, nuanced, charismatic
portrayal of Coalhouse Walker, Jr. in “Ragtime.”
The
one who beat him out was pretty terrific, though -- Alan Cumming in the superb
and disturbing “Cabaret.” The
production won for best musical revival, which was justly deserved; its
haunting stage pictures and shocking ending were unforgettable.
MUSIC: “Can You Feel the Love”
Of
course, I saw “The Lion King.” That was
the first question everyone asked. Well,
what can I say? It’s a jaw-dropping
visual extravaganza, as is everything directed by the Tony-winning Julie
Taymor. Outrageously imaginative
costumes (also by Taymor), and spectacular lighting and scenic design, but
beyond that, nothing. The production
had no emotion, or character development.
In sum, a big, beautiful, lush, lavish disappointment.
But
the year on Broadway was not only marked by mega-musicals; this was an
especially strong season for straight plays, and I couldn’t wait to catch three
of the four ‘Best Play’ Tony Award nominees:
“Art,” “Freak” and “The Beauty Queen of Leenane.”
The
ensemble acting in “Art” and “Beauty Queen” was breathtaking. The plays themselves were a bit less
satisfying, but Yazmina Reza’s “Art” won for Best Play and “Beauty Queen,” by
27 year-old Irish wunderkind, Martin McDonagh, took home most of the acting
awards. But my favorite New York
theater outing was a visit with that hilariously talented Mambo-mouth, John Leguizamo,
in “Freak,” his touching, poignant, brutally honest and very, very funny
autobiographical one-man, multi-character tour de force.
The
other contender for most moving experience was a trip to Ellis Island. It was a foggy day, and as the ferry rounded
the bend, the Statue of Liberty loomed up out of the haze. It was a chilling moment, linking me to all
those tempest-toss’d who’d come before.
I was surprised to find out that 40% of today’s U.S. population -- more
than 100 million people -- can trace their roots to an immigrant ancestor who
came through Ellis Island. So, New York
isn’t just my home town; it’s everyone’s.
MUSIC,
under and out: “New York, New York It’s a Helluva Town”
I’m
Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1998 Patté Productions Inc.