Center
Stage with Pat Launer on KSDS JAZZ88
THEATER REVIEW
“THE HEIDI CHRONICLES” –
AIRDATE:
APRIL 9, 2010
Young women today take their freedoms and
options for granted. They rarely realize what came before, the stages and ages
and battles and shouting and marching and bra-burning and smashing of glass
ceilings. Well, Heidi’s here to remind you. Or I should say, Wendy. That would
be Wendy Wasserstein, the late, much-loved playwright who was, perhaps, the
first to put on paper what women were thinking and feeling, through the
feverish decades from the ‘60s to the ‘80s, from the first sprigs of feminism,
through consciousness-raising and the full flowering of the women’s movement.
We Boomers wanted it all, and we fought to get it. But, as we all know, that
didn’t quite work out. Compromises were made, losses were felt, idealism turned to disillusionment. Babies or husbands or
career advancement were in a push-me-pull-you relationship. Something or other
had to give.
When Wasserstein premiered “The Heidi
Chronicles” in 1988, it was a funny, poignant eye-opener that won the Pulitzer
Prize. I’ve never found it worthy. The play is superficial, and can actually be
viewed as anti-feminist. But its very existence was influential, laying the
groundwork for scads of female writers to come, who still don’t have their
rightful place in the American theater landscape.
Meanwhile, there’s Heidi, chronicling her
lurching evolution through the decades. I’ve never found her to be a very
satisfying character. She’s smart and witty, well educated, and, as an art
historian, she teaches us a bit about the forgotten women of art history. But
she’s frustrating and depressive, always more a witness and observer than a
participant. And with all her liberated leanings, both she and the play are
driven and defined by men.
Heidi doesn’t change much over the course
of these turbulent years. Perhaps that’s symbolically represented by the one uncharacteristic
costume worn by Kristianne Kurner throughout the
The performances are more earnest than
comical and, under the aegis of first-time director
“The Heidi
Chronicles” runs through April 25, at
©2010 PAT LAUNER