Saturday, September 15, 2018

I Was Most Alive with You

C


Playwright Craig Lucas (Prelude to a Kiss, The Dying Gaul) began with a noble goal: to write a play for charismatic actor Russell Harvard that would be equally accessible for a hearing audience as well as those who can read American Sign Language. To accomplish his goal he cast each character with two actors — one communicating primarily or exclusively by speech and the other by ASL. Playwrights Horizons is presenting the New York premiere. One of the characters is Deaf (capital D signifying one who identifies with Deaf culture) and another is deaf (small d signifying one who does not). There are so many interesting issues revolving around D/deafness, among them preferred method of communication and its implications, resistance to other methods, controversy over cochlear implants, attitude toward Deaf culture vs. assimilation, that there would seem to be rich material for a play with that as the main focus. Unfortunately, the playwright has chosen to harness the plot to the Book of Job, which is an uncomfortable fit. First of all, it is unclear who the Job figure is in the play. Is it Ash (Michael Gaston;Lucky Guy, The Cripple of Inishmann), a writer on a long-running TV show, who is beset with a variety of calamities on Thanksgiving Day? Is it his son Knox (Russell Harvard; Tribes, Spring Awakeningwho is Deaf, gay and a recovering addict? Or is it possibly Knox’s deaf boyfriend Farhad (Tad Cooley) who suffered a horrendous childhood? If Job is about bad things happening to good people, it is not obvious which if any of these three qualifies as good. We also meet Ash’s writing partner and creative soulmate Astrid (Marianna Bassham; Our Town), his ironically named, boozy wife Pleasant (Lisa Emery; Marvin's Room, Marjorie Prime) who feels lost as both wife and mother, his mother Carla (Lois Smith; Marjorie Prime, John), who produces his TV show, and her nurse Mariama (Gameela Wright; Halcyon Days). When Lucas brings on the calamities, he seemingly throws in every topical social issue he can think of: alcoholism, opiate abuse, Ponzi schemes, bullying, sexual abuse, severe depression, capital punishment, antipathy toward Muslims, HIV, costly health care. The result is a play that is overstuffed and unfocused. As a further complication, the story is framed as a play within a play that the writers are developing. On the plus side, there are strong performances from the speaking actors and moments that are quite affecting. I never pass up an opportunity to see Lois Smith onstage. The shadow cast (Seth Gore, Beth Applebaum, Amelia Hensley, Harold Foxx, Anthony Natale, Kalen Feeney, Alexandra Wailes) performs on a balcony eight feet above the main stage, which makes it difficult to give simultaneous attention to them as well as to the actors below. I am not qualified to evaluate the quality of their ASL signing. The set by Arnulfo Maldonado (Iowa, Men on Boats) recreates the writers’ room of the tv show with gestures to other locations as needed. Unfortunately this requires some of the actors to be furniture movers. The costumes by David C. Woolard (The Rocky Horror Show) did not call attention to themselves. The lighting by Annie Wiegand is very helpful in establishing both location and time. Tyne Rafaeli (The Rape of the Sabine Women) directed with Sabrina Dennison as ASL director. The play could use some judicious cutting. There are repetitive passages, e.g. the same letter is presented twice, once in speech and later in ASL. While I admire the playwright for his ambition, I wish that he had not cluttered up the play with too many half-developed ideas. I do not grasp how the title relates to the play. Running time: two hours, 20 minutes including intermission.

NOTE: Here’s a YouTube clip of Russell Harvard’s prayer in the first act. Paste the link into your browser and press the CC button to see the captions:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2392LaI0Ck&t=28s

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