SAN DIEGO THEATRE SCENE
"CURTAIN CALLS"
By Pat Launer
06/23/04
Robots and Bach and murder, oh my!
How local theater doth satisfy!
THE GLOBE IS SPINNING
Girl genius/science whizzes are
proliferating on local stages. And it's about time. First there was
"Kid-Simple," and now there's Jenny Chow (or more accurately,
Jennifer Marcus). "The Intelligent Design of Jenny Chow" is a
delightful stretch for the Old Globe. A cyber-story written by a young unknown
(with plenty of net-refs and off-color language). Directed by and starring
locals. And designed by locals, too. Way cool!
There are many ways to consider this
play, written by 30 year-old Yale Drama student Rolin Jones. It's a
coming-of-age story. It's about ingenuity and scientific creation. It's about
mothers and daughters, self-discovery and identity, accepting less than
perfection, living up (or down) to expectations. At the outset, it's awash in
sitcom one-liners. At the end, it's somewhat unresolved. And throughout, there's
the faintest whiff of … devaluing women. All the characters are flawed, but the
females seem irredeemably so, from the emotionally impaired wunderkind
to her defective robotic doppelganger, from her relentlessly cruel adoptive
mother to her helpless, ineffectual birth mother. Alas. Can't a compelling,
young central female character be inspiring? Well, maybe that's for another
Jones play.
In this one, Jennifer is an
obsessive-compulsive, agoraphobic prodigy. She lives in a gated Calabasas
community with her former-fireman stay-at-home dad and her nasty,
disappointed-in-her, work-obsessed mom. But she longs to make contact with her
birth mother in China. Trapped in her room and online at all times, she comes
up with the idea of creating a robot to make the trip for her. She reconnects
with a wild-haired, maniacal professor who helps her score a sub-contract job
with the government, so she can get spare parts. She calls her alter-ego Jenny
Chow, named for herself and her birth mother, and trains her to be independent,
thinking and 'normal' -- as normal as anyone can be in this wacky world.
There's her goofy, pizza-delivering pothead friend Todd, who also seems to have
something of a social communication disorder. Then there's the online Mormon
who locates her birth-mother in China -- in exchange for cyber-sex. And the
nerdy Southerner who consults with her on the government contract. It's all
pretty wild and woolly, and by and large, it's pulled off beautifully on the
Carter stage.
Overall, "Jenny Chow" is engaging
and stimulating. As directed by Sledgehammer's Kirsten Brandt, it's inventive
and imaginative. And the acting is delightful. Seema Sueko is a jumpy,
hyperactive dynamo, who perfectly captures the little nuances of her various
disorders -- the compulsion to make the same trip out of her room every time,
in exactly the same way, tapping or touching exactly the same items. And, when
her adoptive mother tries to force her out of the house, having a full-on
hysterical, agoraphobic fit. Very disturbing, very convincing. If only she'd
come a little further in her frailties and disabilities by the end.
Steve Pickering makes for a caring if
inept father, Zachary Quinto is aptly and endearingly dim-witted as Todd
("I've got four words for you: 'Po-ceed with Caution!'"); Kelly
VanKirk is hilarious in the rest of the male roles; and as the robotic Jenny,
Michelle Wong is attractive and incredibly agile (her bio does note that this
Bishops School alum was a two-year National Champion in cheerleading, and she
gets to show her balancing, leaping, spinning stuff here). The weak link is
Jordan Baker, who can't seem to find the heart of Jenny's beleaguered and
disappointed workaholic Mom. We have no sympathy for her, and we need to, or
else she's nothing but an awful, hateful person. Yes, she's had to take over
the breadwinning after her husband's accident. Yes, after all her years of
trying to conceive, she thought Jennifer was and would be her 'perfect baby,'
but she's got to have more facets than the angry, screechy harridan she's
portrayed as here.
The design elements work creatively
with the constraints of an arena stage. Much of the discourse is actually
conducted online; the subtitle of the piece is, after all, "An Instant
Message with Excitable Music." A large computer screen is suggested, and
rotated on a turntable periodically (though not much, and not to significant
effect). Jennifer's room is on that turntable, an ultra-bright, pink-orange
assemblage of electronics plus beanbag chair (designed by Michelle Riel). The
mid-theater stairways serve as the locales of her various online contacts.
David Lee Cuthbert works his usual magic with the lighting, including a
specially-lit Rubiks-type cube, backlit floor-squares and a mass of bulbous
white Chinese lanterns that hang overhead. Pal Peterson's sound design is aptly
cyber-savvy and at appropriate times, Asian-tinged.
There are many glib, facile moments
here, but also some genuine emotional ones. Jones has his finger on the pulse of
his own generation, though he has a penchant for caricature. But, under the
expert guidance of Kirsten Brandt, his quirky mix of humor and pathos, and his
Gen-X sense of ill-defined identity come together as much more than just an
emoticon.
MAID TO ORDER
It
was big news in 1933. Two maids, the reportedly incestuous Pepin sisters,
committed a horrific crime, murdering their mistress. The sensational story was
reshaped into more than 25
adaptations -- books, films, opera, plays, including "The Maids" by Jean
Genet (1948),
and more recently, the 2000 movie, "Murderous
Maids."
The news item caught the eye of Genet,
who had a pretty sensational story in his own right. Born to a young Parisian
prostitute in 1910, he was given up for adoption and placed in a series of
foster homes. Falsely accused of theft when he was a
child, he resolved thereafter to become a real thief, and was in and out
of prison his whole life. Flagrantly homosexual, he spent years as a prostitute
and degenerate. The criminal underworld always seemed to be his preferred
milieu. He claimed that the world
rejected him, so he rejected the world. The thrust of his work was always
anti-bourgeois, fetishistic, celebrating perversity. Yet Genet's works are in
some ways humane, in their protection and defense of misfits, social outcasts,
and the oppressed.
"The Maids," his first
play, reflected his lifelong disdain
for authority, and in its Absurdist structure, is less concerned with the
literal truth of the maids' story than the inner workings of their minds. It's
jam-packed with illusions created by the sisters as a way to combat their
oppressive circumstances. They feel ashamed and dirty because of their poverty,
and they act out elaborate role-plays in which they employ cutting insults and
even physical violence in their sado-masochistic "ceremony," the most
cherished time of their day.
The deceptions they create are so
powerful, they confuse both sisters' sense of reality; several times, Claire
refers to Solange as "Claire," and in Solange's final monologue, she
plays and addresses a dizzying array of characters. The rituals are not the
only illusion in the self-conscious play, which consistently draws attention to
its theatricality. Solange vicariously revels in the escapist stories Claire
writes. Madame fantasizes about a criminal escape with her incarcerated lover.
In the highly enigmatic final monologue, Solange becomes writer, actor and
detached narrator, commenting on what happens after the "play" has
ended.
Genet even suggested an additional
layer of artifice; he recommended that all three women's roles be played by
young men, which reflects another theme familiar to his work: that gender is
just another mask we wear (it's
theater, too).
In this striking 6th @ Penn
production, Sam Woodhouse has stuck with female actors, precisely directed. But
he adds yet another level of illusion; all the action is projected on three
small TV screens. Claire, ever suspicious that someone is watching them, films
their actions for her own (perverse) enjoyment.
The play, and this production, shatter
illusions about love, hate and the very nature of reality. Cruelty, sexual
jealousy, deceit and self-loathing infuse nearly every line. The sisters'
desperation, passion, revulsion and desire twist their tortured lives into an
inexorable spiral toward freedom at any cost, paid for in guilt, degradation
and death. Like much of Genet's work, "The Maids" is a tale of
connections that choke, maim and kill; the connections we think will bind us
together serve only to highlight our alienation from one another.
In the tiny 6th @ Penn
Theater, the production is appropriately claustrophobic. Adorned with paper
flowers and crammed to bursting with Madame's myriad slips, stoles, dresses and
underthings -- draped over doorways, wires and hangers -- there's barely room
to breathe (effective set design by Kevin Judge). The nicely subtle lighting
(Jennifer Setlow) is dark, shadowy, as ominous as the action on the stage,
which is punctuated by a soundscape (George Ye) ranging from rock music to
mournful mass melodies (Lacrymosa, Sanctus).
At the dark heart of the drama is the
shifting power dynamics of this dangerous duo… who is older, who younger; who
is master, who slave; who is seducer and who seduced. As Claire, the younger,
more feminine of the two, Laurie Lehmann-Gray is excellent when she mimics
Madame, French accent and all. She turns on a dime emotionally, although she is
less dominant than the script might suggest. Dana Hooley has perhaps the more
difficult task as Solange, a character with few endearing traits, posed as the
unrelenting negative against which Genet contrasts the more humane emotions.
Hooley plays at a high pitch, but she modulates well when needed. There is less
chemistry and sexuality between the two than the situation and stark language
of the play imply. Anne Tran does her best work as the frivolous, unthinkingly
imperious Madame. The temperature of the whole piece is both heated and cooled
by her gorgeous, sensual presence.
According to Genet, life is just a row
of mirrors intended to confound the oppressed, bamboozle the sensitive and --
with any luck -- confuse the audience. This production achieved his intention.
This piece isn't for everyone. But nearly 60 years after its premiere, it still
manages to be both unnerving and disturbing.
SIX MEN AND AN ORGAN COMPETITION
On
Book On Stage has done it again -- organized a thrilling evening of theatrical
titillation, with the reading of a new play, "Bach in Leipzig," by
young (30-something) Brooklynite Itamar Moses. The playwright wanted to
be there Monday night at the Cassius Carter Centre Stage but he demurred, since
the play is being workshopped at this moment at New York Stage and Film. It's
slated for a full production at Milwaukee Rep next spring.
The
play is a delicious historical comedy that pits six ruthless 18th
century German organists against one another as they vie for the most coveted
musical post in Europe, chief organist at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig. The
Master, Johann Kuhnau, has died, and auditions for the post are announced,
sparking cold-blooded competition. There's truth in these historical events,
and in the existence of the main characters, ranging from the incredibly
prolific and acclaimed Georg Philipp Telemann to the timeless Johann Sebastian
Bach (who wasn't half as well known at the time), to a host of others --
conveniently selected by Moses to be named either Johann or Georg, a running
joke in the play.
The
piece gets off to a slow start with a very long monologue (terrifically
delivered by Sean Murray) in the form of a letter (missives abound throughout
the play) which establishes the time -- 1722 -- and the situation. The writing
is clever and there are innumerable sarcastic asides, double entendres and
misunderstandings. As theater, it's farcical. But as music -- the structure of
which it closely parallels -- it's a fugue, handily and extensively defined and
described in the text so we don't miss the point. It's a "fabric of
sound" into which no one, until Bach, has inserted six different voices
intertwining, each with its own thrust and melody.
In
the play, as in a fugue, a subject is announced in one voice, imitated in
succession by each of the other voices, and brought to a contrapuntal
crescendo. Jokes, themes, references and confusions recur repeatedly. The
musical allusions come fast and furious, and are only exceeded by the
self-referential theater terms and in-jokes. Oh, and let's not forget the religious
disquisitions, which are fine (if lengthy) when they're poking fun at the
battling Calvinists and Lutherans, but leave a lot of us behind when they bring
in the Pietists. Though some of the religious distinctions no longer apply, the
debate over innovation vs. tradition has never left us -- in music or religion,
theater, politics, or life.
There's
little action in the first act, as each character (or fugal 'voice') enters and
tells his story, then has some superficially polite but reprehensible interaction
with another voice, and then another 'episode' ensues. This would make it difficult (read: static)
to stage, but a highly imaginative director might figure out some exciting way
to make it sing (so to speak).
To
everyone's delight, there happened to be three such potential directors onstage
for the reading: Cygnet's artistic director Sean Murray, North Coast Rep's
David Ellenstein and the peripatetic and skillful Robert May. The Murray-May
interactions were especially amusing. Manuel Fernandes and Ryan McKinney
(recent grad of the MFA Musical Theatre program at SDSU), provided most of the
comic relief. Nick Cordileone (most often seen at Lamb's) was as stalwart as
usual, and Ellenstein had a small but showy role as the puffed-up but
frustrated second banana, always behind Telemann (and later, Bach). Paul
Bourque was amusing as The Greatest Organist in Germany. With minimal rehearsal
and enormous depth of content and character to contend with, these guys did a
spectacular job.
History
is the springboard, but there's a lot more here… perhaps a bit too much. A little trimming would go a long way. But
Moses obviously has a thinking mind, an ear for dialogue and a way with wit.
He's definitely someone to watch. And I'll be watching for these directors to
grace us with their onstage talents more often. Bravo to director Brendon Fox,
the Actors Alliance, and the wonderful cast.
THE LONG GOODBYE
Well, it's finally time for me to
(publicly) bid a very fond farewell to Chuck Zito, who's returning to New York
to be with family and loved one(s). During his all-too-brief 3 1/2 year tenure
as executive director, Diversionary Theatre rose to its highest heights. Thank
you, Chuck, for your professionalism and judgment, for making everyone feel
welcome at Diversionary, and for seeing that the theater presented fine,
challenging and well-wrought work. All good luck to you in all your future
endeavors.
THE BIG TEASE
Get out the Aqua-Net. Besides Jack
O'Brien, there's another local "Hairspray" connection. Jesse
Johnson, a former player at San Diego Junior Theatre, will be coming home with
the touring production in July at the Civic Theatre (7/6-18X). His most recent
JT credits were Tony in "West Side Story (2000) and Daniel Beauxhomme, the
male lead in "Once on This Island" (2002).
And
now, for THIS WEEK'S 'DON'T MISS' LIST
"The Maids" -- darkly disturbing, enigmatic, and not for everyone, this 56
year-old Genet classic tells a murderous tale of incest, jealousy and dangerous
games. A risky/sexy production at 6th @ Penn, through July 25.
"The Intelligent Design of Jenny
Chow" -- fascinating premise, a stellar
local lead and excellent direction; at the Globe's Cassius Carter, through July
18.
"An Experiment with an
Airpump" -- wonderfully intelligent, provocative
play, excellently acted and directed. Absolutely not to be missed. At Adams
Avenue Studio of the Arts, through June 27.
"Continental Divide" -- a pair of plays, for anyone who cares about the state of the
Union, the political process, and our loss of idealism (and has a long
attention span). In repertory at the La Jolla Playhouse, through August 1.
"Kid-Simple" -- wildly imaginative, and just plain wild. A sound-feast and
act-fest. At Sledgehammer Theatre, through July 11.
"Bed and Sofa" - delightfully quirky little musical, gorgeously designed and
sung. See it, for sure! At Cygnet Theatre, through July 18.
Celebrate the end of June Gloom (we
hope)… at the theater!
©2004
Patté Productions Inc.