THEATRE REVIEW:
“WORKING” at the San Diego Repertory Theatre & “NICKEL AND
DIMED” at the Mark Taper Forum
KPBS
AIRDATE: October 18, 2002
"Work," said psychotherapist
Abraham Low, "is getting paid to bear discomfort." Or, as essayist
Alfred Polgar put it, "Work is what you do so that some time you won't
have to do it any more." On stages in San Diego and L.A., working stiffs
are getting their 15 minutes of fame -- celebrated in song in a reprise
production of "Working, The Musical" at the San Diego Rep, and in the
world premiere of "Nickel and Dimed" at the Mark Taper Forum. Both
come from literary sources. "Working" is based on published
interviews conducted by Pulitzer Prize-winning social historian Studs Terkel.
"Nickel and Dimed" is Joan Holden's adaptation of the best-seller of
the same name by Barbara Ehrenreich.
In 1981, when the Rep first produced
"Working," it was moving and significant, a credible series of
vignettes about white and blue-collar workers. The glitzy new production feels
slick and theatricalized, upgrading the production values while downgrading the
work force. The musical revue, though well staged and well sung, makes us nod
and say, "My, aren't they talented, portraying all those different
workers?" And, "Boy, that fireman monologue really resonates this
year."
But we respond viscerally, not
intellectually, to "Nickel and Dimed." Ehrenreich's story goes right
to the bone and below, to hit raw, guilt-ridden nerve. The award-winning social
critic went underground for a few months, leaving her cushy life behind and
taking minimum-wage jobs in Florida, Maine and Minnesota, to try and subsist at
the poverty level. We get that queasy-uneasy feeling of collective guilt,
coupled with the aching awareness of how much sheer luck separates us from our
low-wage brethren, and the painful realization that their mind-numbing,
back-breaking labor subsidizes our comfortable, middle-class lives.
This is thought-provoking, social
action theater, heartbreaking, but often funny, too. Less agit-prop than
consciousness-raising. Enough to increase our compassion or spur us to do
something different, even if it's only to tip higher, or pay more attention to
the servers, salespeople and house-cleaners around us. The play, which centers
on an engaging Sharon Lockwood as the frazzled, overwhelmed Ehrenreich, is true
to the book and theatrical in all sorts of inventive ways, under Bartlett
Sher's creative direction, backed by John Arnone's imaginative sets. We really
get to know the changing characters in "Nickel and Dimed" --
and we really come to care about them. Unlike the book, at the end, we actually
find out what happened to the workers after Ehrenreich left each job. She may
not have changed their lives or attitudes, but she might just change ours.
©2002
Patté Productions Inc.