THEATRE REVIEW:
“HOW I LEARNED TO DRIVE” at
San Diego Repertory Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: NOVEMBER 18, 1998
In
a seriously dysfunctional family where everyone is nicknamed for the size of
their genitalia, Li’l Bit is ill-fated from birth. When she was 11 and fully developed, and no one understood her,
her Uncle Peck was always there -- to lay a sympathetic hand on her shoulder --
or on her burgeoning breasts.
The
1998 Pulitzer Prize-winning “How I Learned to Drive” is, as playwright Paula Vogel
puts it, the Lolita story told from Lolita’s point of view. It’s not just a simple, stomach-churning
tale of pedophilia, about some sleazy, demented sociopath lurking lasciviously
in a darkened doorway. This is the more
common story: a trusted friend or
relative, and a deep, difficult, complex relationship.
Either
way, it’s an incendiary subject, but Vogel laces her play with humor, and
frames it in the context of street signs, rules of the road, and lessons in
handling all kinds of traffic, to avoid the worst kind of moving
violations. Behind the wheel of his ‘62
Buick, Uncle Peck teaches Li’l Bit how to drive -- and a li’l bit more.
Structurally,
the piece is choppy and non-linear.
Li’l Bit is telling us her story, jumping back and forth in time, from
age 11 to 39, recalling the seminal events that marked her life -- and marked
her for life. The humor takes the chill
off, but this is still one cold and discomfiting tale.
It’s
about cars and sexuality, power and lust, loneliness and desperate mutual
need. Sexism, incest and
seduction. But it’s no black and white
newsprint report of victimization. In
fact, the world Vogel creates is garishly colored at times. To temper the intensity, she brings in a
burlesque of cartoonish characters, played by a so-called Greek chorus of
three. At the San Diego Repertory
Theatre, these hypersexualized caricatures are overly coarse and campy, and
sometimes frankly undifferentiated.
Maybe
the playwright’s intention was to mollify the audience, soften the hard edges,
or even reflect a distorted teenage perspective. But, like the scene-introducing pronouncements from an old
Driver’s Handbook (“You and the Reverse Gear,” “Idling in Neutral,” etc.) they
bring a grating sameness and a discordant tone to the piece. Under Sam Woodhouse’s direction, these
characters are not clearly conceived or realized, though Linda Libby is both
versatile and poignant as Li’l Bit’s advice-spewing, besotted mother and the
girl’s long-suffering Aunt Mary, who blames and resents her niece for
“borrowing” her Uncle Peck.
Despite
the silly, sometimes frenetic goings-on at the periphery, the main event is
center-stage, in the eerily tender, twisted love story between a young girl and
a man 27 years her senior. Like their
relationship, the play is seductive, humorous, disturbing and strangely
empathic. It’s a disquieting
coming-of-age narrative, a tale of suppression and survival, set here in a
surreal landscape that looks unappealingly like twenty miles of bad road. The mixed messages and metaphors don’t
always work. Neither do the
performances. But there are aching,
chilling moments of truth -- like the one brief bedroom scene when Li’l Bit
turns 18, and in Uncle Peck’s frighteningly insidious fishing lesson, directed
to a very young, unseen male cousin.
As
Li’l Bit, Jennifer Parsons could show a bit more nuance, more transition from
wide-eyed pre-pubescent to flirtatious adolescent to older-but-wiser
adult. But in the character’s moments
of greatest anguish and confusion, she is heart-breaking. Lawrence Hecht’s Uncle Peck is calm,
reassuring and suitably avuncular. He
shows his pain better than his passion, but he makes Peck a sympathetic,
three-dimensional man, neither hateful nor pathetic, and maybe even a tad
tragic at the end.
In
the beautifully theatrical final image, both tender and troubling, we see that
Li’l Bit, though scarred and haunted, still believes in family and forgiveness,
and has found the strength to drive on.
I’m
Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1998 Patté Productions
Inc.