THEATRE REVIEW:
“SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH” at La
Jolla Playhouse
KPBS AIRDATE: October 29, 1999
The La Jolla Playhouse
production of "Sweet Bird of Youth" is like an elegant, fragile
ceramic bowl. From a distance, it's
lovely, but when you look closer, it's got lots of little cracks that mar the
finished product.
Some of the problem was
in the clay, so to speak, what the potter or shaper of the piece had to work
with. This isn't Tennessee Williams'
strongest creation; it's less lyrical than his masterpieces, though it's
populated by the playwright's character prototypes -- each more compelling in
other plays, especially the earlier, Pulitzer Prize-winning "Cat on a Hot
Tin Roof," where there's another promising young buck who disappoints friends
and family, tangled up with a disturbed, shrewish middle-aged woman and a
powerful Big Daddy. To extend the
ceramic metaphor just one thought further, the potter in this case, director
Michael Greif, has fashioned far better works of art as well.
This "Bird" is
Greif's swan-song, his last production as artistic director of the La Jolla
Playhouse, before he returns to New York.
It bears some of his trademark beauty and filmic vision, but none of the
excitement or subtlety he brought to knockout productions like "Therese
Racquin" or "Dogeaters."
The play itself is too explicit in pounding and expounding its theme of
vanished youth. The playwright hammers
home the message in his fading filmstar and her aging gigolo, both running from
their various failures. The younger
man, though, is drawn back to the Southern town of his birth, where he left
behind his long-lost love, the now-broken, barren daughter of the influential
town politico, Boss Finley.
The threat of castration
runs through the piece, and Greif heightens the repeated references by staging
a provocative show-opener that explicitly recreates the emasculation of a
hapless black man. By bookending the
play with castrations, foreshadowing the play's climax (which is already
foreshadowed enough by the playwright), Greif has, in a sense, emasculated the
play.
The direction
consistently illustrates rather than enhancing the text, with back-story
periodically acted out upstage, above the playing-space. Even the tech work is a little off. The stark,
white abstract set doesn't match the on-the-nose realism of the acting and
direction, and it's got this useless and barely-used stream of water onstage,
which adds nothing to the production.
Even the costumes are problematic, with the Princess teetering on
stiletto-heeled mules that distract each time she makes her way across the
stage.
There aren't too many
likable characters here. The self-proclaimed "monsters," Alexandra
del Lago (modeled after Tallulah Bankhead) and Chance Wayne, her loser of a boy-toy,
are center stage. But Pamela
Payton-Wright and Patrick Wilson aren't quite up to the task. Neither is enough of a charismatic presence
to engage or enthrall. In this production, the strongest portrayals are in the
big old racist, Boss Finley -- grandly played by veteran actor M. Emmett Walsh
-- and his bone-headed, buzz-cut son, a menacing thug hellbent on exacting
revenge on Chance Wayne for destroying the life and fertility of his
sister.
There are moments of
beauty or delicacy in this production, but by and large, this "Bird"
doesn't fly. This surely isn't what
Michael Greif will be remembered for, but in his five years at the Playhouse,
he certainly left an indelible mark on San Diego theater.
©1999 Patté Productions
Inc.