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©
Back Stage West; November 1, 2001
Happy
Birthday Wanda June
CRITIC'S PICK
by Dany
Margolis
In
this update of his 1970 play, Kurt
Vonnegut Jr. amiably permits his heroine to warn
us, ''This is a period play.''
Well,
like any fine work of art, it is and it isn't. The script has retained
the color and whimsy of the era, but in this high-voltage production
it delivers a shock of recognition. Under the broadly comedic but
detailed direction of Robert B.
Weide, the uniformly excellent cast
walks a finely honed line between the sophisticated ideas and cartoonish
characters in Vonnegut's rich script. A once-modern hero, the now
seemingly menacing Harold Ryan (a commanding Tom Dugan) creates
a cultural and familial storm when, to the astonishment of his wife
and preteen son, he returns to Manhattan from his eight-year adventure
diamond hunting in the jungle. Written during and metaphorically
about the Vietnam War, and self-styled ''a simple-minded play about
men who enjoy killing,'' the script works today, particularly if
we believe we've met the new enemy and this time it's not us. And
within this framework, only Vonnegut can write, ''Its a jungle
out there'' and turn it into sophisticated wit.
Presiding
serenely over the center of this vortex is Penelope (Linda Bates),
who, like her namesake in ancient Greek legend, has at least subconsciously
been awaiting the return of her warrior husband. Bates plays her
proto-feminist character as regal but human, sensual but untouched.
Scotty Hauser steadfastly portrays their clear-eyed son. Penelope
has been dating the pacifist Dr. Woodly (Jon Lee Cope, who graciously
lets his strings of love beads curve over his paunch) and the vacuum-cleaner
salesman Herb Shuttle (a galvanic David Alex Rosen). Harold returns
with his traveling companion, the ambivalent and befuddled Col.
Looseleaf Harper (a sweetly dizzying Mitchell Holden). Presenting
Vonnegut's sardonic notions of the afterlife are the celestial presences
of young Wanda June (Danyel Crawford demonstrating timing and presence
beyond her years), the way-too-nice Nazi major (an entrancing David
Holladay), and the seriously soaked Mildred (an acid-tongued Bonnie
McNeil).
On
Burris Jackes blood-red and safari-infested Manhattan living-room
set that turns the shallow stage into a haven and heaven under Jay
Boltons decisive lighting design, with striking period costumes
by Patty Malkin and Peter Smith's enchanting sound -- the wartime
world becomes lusciously optimistic. And what a relief it is.
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