THEATRE REVIEW:
“A HATFUL OF RAIN” at New Village Arts
KPBS
AIRDATE: May 31, 2002
They definitely like 'em
dark, if not deep. New Village Arts Theatre, North County's latest and most
ambitious addition to the San Diego theater community, debuted with "Brilliant
Traces" last year, recently did a workshop production of
"Trapped" and have now
mounted "A Hatful of Rain." There's a through-line here about
confinement, constriction, no exit.
The latest venture,
Michael Gazzo's 1955 Broadway play that became a successful movie, concerns
Johnny Pope, a Korean War veteran, who, during his postwar hospital
confinement, became addicted to mainlined narcotics. He's kept his habit from
his wife and father, but has been abetted by his hapless younger brother. Now he's
having more trouble getting a fix, he owes a lot of money, his dealer is
closing in on him, and it's time to spill the beans to the family. The
kitchen-sink drama is reminiscent of the early work of Arthur Miller,
especially "All My Sons" and "Death of a Salesman," with
their dysfunctional and disillusioned father/son triads.
Though there's plenty of
intensity and anguish here, there's far less depth and social message than
underlies Miller's work and makes it so brilliant and enduring. Not that drug addiction
isn't relevant and family obligations aren't pertinent. But somehow, the piece
feels dated and a bit musty. Nonetheless, New Village has dusted it off and
made it sparkle, in a forceful and focused production, presented in an unlikely
venue: the corporate headquarters of Jazzercise in Carlsbad. Justin Hall's
spare set has a '50s feel, but it's not as cramped as the text suggests.
Although each New Village offering has been in a different, sometimes
site-specific location, it's really the performances that give life and breath
to the productions.
Francis Gercke,
co-founder and artistic director of the company, serves as director and lead
actor. A tricky business, but Gercke's work is always riveting, and here he is
gut-wrenching as poor, suffering Johnny. There isn't a false or unconvincing
note in his gripping performance. His co-founder and wife, Kristiane Kurner, is
compelling as Johnny's long-suffering spouse. The rest of the cast is forceful
and convincing as well: Tony Gorodeckas as the younger brother, dealer/thugs
Robert Dahey, Tom Reusing and Tristan Poje, Jack Missett as the deluded dad and
Jessica John as a strung-out socialite. Besides the obvious relationship links,
there's also a historical connection; the play was developed and workshopped at
the Actors Studio, of which Gercke and Kerner are graduates.
It all comes full
circle, and everything looks hopeful in the end.. very unlike Miller's
neo-tragedies. But there's nothing tragic about New Village Arts, which, with
its youth, intensity and professionalism, brings a veritable hatful of sunshine
to local theater.
©2002 Patté Productions
Inc