Center
Stage with Pat Launer on KSDS JAZZ88
THEATER
REVIEWS
‘An American Duet’ – ion theatre:
“ELLIOT: A SOLDIER’S FUGUE”
and “BACK OF THE THROAT”
AIRDATE: MARCH 26, 2010
While the country is embroiled in wars on
two fronts, along comes ion theatre, with a double-barreled attack on war
itself. The gutsy, spirited little company is inaugurating its newly
refurbished Hillcrest space with “An American Duet,” a pair of short political
plays that might, at moments, make you cringe – and will, most certainly, make
you think.
“Elliot, A Soldier’s Fugue” is true to its
musical name; one central theme is repeated, in counterpoint, in different
voices. It’s a tricky dramatic construction, and with an inspired cast,
first-time director
Nineteen year-old Elliot Ortiz is just back
from
A finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize,
“Elliot” was written by Quiara Alegría
Hudes when she was 28 years old. The Yale graduate of
Jewish-Puerto Rican descent went on to write the book for the Tony
Award-winning musical, “In the Heights.” The memories in her poignant, poetic
play are sometimes fierce, sometimes tender. The horrors of the first kill;
searching for comrades’ body parts; sustaining an excruciating injury. But
there are also gentle recollections: of playing Bach flute sonatas for the
platoon, or meeting your true love in a military hospital. The
contrapuntal structure creates a universal soldier’s story, about fathers and
sons, connection and isolation, and history repeating itself, on the grand and
the intimate scale.
The companion piece is “Back of the
Throat,” a reference to the accurate pronunciation of an Arabic name, Khaled. The young man who bears
that name, is an unassuming Arab-American writer who’s visited by a couple of
uninvited, unidentified government agents after an unnamed terrorist attack.
Written in 2004 by Egypt-born, Seattle-based playwright Yussef
El Guindi, the intense one-act is a post-9/11
nightmare, about anxiety and paranoia, racial profiling and interrogation
without justification. How personal rights can be subordinated to insinuation
and intimidation. What starts out casual, affable and even amusing becomes
increasingly ominous and ultimately, ambiguous. Under the direction of
Here’s a unique opportunity to engage your
brain and see the world through someone else’s eyes. A gripping experience, well
worth pursuing… times two.
The two plays of
ion theatre’s ‘American Duet’ runs in repertory through April 17 at The BLKBOX
@ 6th & Penn, on the edge of Hillcrest.
©2010 PAT LAUNER