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Sibling Disharmony
Brother and sister face off over a family heirloom
in a so-so production of Wilson's The Piano Lesson
BY RONALD MANGRAVITE
| "The past is prologue,"
goes the old saying, but for much of the theater,
ancient and modern, the past isn't even past.
Many plays have been constructed about past crimes
that have risen to disturb the peace of the present.
It's an ongoing trend that's particularly interesting
in contemporary America, which seems to lack much
interest in (or at least respect for) history,
except as the raw material for the latest Russell
Crowe movie. |
The
Piano Lesson
Details: Written by August Wilson. Directed
by John Pryor. With Tarell Alvin-McCraney, Chat
Atkins, Lela Elam, Andre L. Gainey, Ray Lockhart,
Erica Randle, Stacy-Ann Rose, and Keith Wade.
Presented through December 14. Call 305-895-8955.
Where: The M Ensemble, 12320 W Dixie Hwy, North
Miami |
Among modern American playwrights, August Wilson
has perhaps the keenest sense of history. He has dedicated
a full set of ten plays to the African-American experience
in the Twentieth Century, one play for each decade.
But history for Wilson is not merely to be chronicled
and celebrated; it must be confronted. For Wilson's
characters, the present always contains serious challenges,
but the past is both inescapable and irresolvable.
In The Piano Lesson, now being presented by the M
Ensemble in North Miami, Wilson conjures up a tale
of family discord that is deceptively simple at first
view. It's the 1930s, and a restless man from Mississippi,
Boy Willie, shows up at his sister's house in Pittsburgh
with a truckload of watermelons he has hauled up from
down South. Boy Willie's a dynamic, gregarious character
with a lot of charm but a steely intent. He plans
to sell his melons and the family piano, an heirloom
handed down to him and his sister, Berneice, from
their slave ancestors. Therein lies the problem: Boy
Willie wants to sell this relic of the past to gain
land, the asset his sharecropper family has always
lacked. But Berneice refuses to sell the piano, a
symbol of all that her family has endured and overcome.
The brother/sister standoff simmers during Boy Willie's
visit, but tensions don't build immediately, largely
due to the likable relatives and friends who come
and go in Berneice's household. Uncle Doaker may grumble
and fuss, but he provides the whiskey for more than
one storytelling session. Another relative, Winning
Boy, serves up his share of those stories. And Boy
Willie's country pal Lymon finds Pittsburgh to his
liking, as well as Berneice. But as Boy Willie's stay
comes to an end, his showdown with Berneice looms
closer. The Piano Lesson is Wilson's second Pulitzer
Prize-winning script, a traditionally structured drama
that is filled with evocative language and dramatic
tension. It's also quite funny and charming, with
a vivid sense of relationships -- these characters
really feel like an extended family.
The production features a lively, intelligent acting
ensemble, which takes on the challenge of Wilson's
poetic text with mixed results. The key performance
comes from Stacy-Ann Rose, who is thoroughly engaging
as the put-upon Berneice. Rose's acting style is low-key
and emotionally grounded, and she's nicely matched
with Tarell Alvin-McCraney as Lymon. In the production's
best scene, Lymon sits on the living room settee with
Berneice, chatting about his search for a down-to-earth
woman to love. You can precisely spot the separate
moments when these lonely people suddenly develop
an attraction for each other. Their awkward realizations
of this attraction and their subsequent attempts to
disguise it make for an indelible acting sequence,
which director John Pryor handles deftly. Ray Lockhart
does a nice job in the rather underwritten, typical
role of Avery, the preacher and Berneice's erstwhile
suitor. Same goes for Keith Wade as the gruff, slow-burning
Doaker, and Chat Atkins as the winsome, restless Winning
Boy, who grabs laughs with his jokes yet finds some
touching pathos in his memories of his ex-wife.
However, this Lesson misses the mark in some respects.
The redoubtable Andre L. Gainey is miscast as Boy
Willie, whose menace and tightly coiled frustration
drive the story. Much of Wilson's work comes down
to this single character type, an ornery, self-reliant
black hero who, living by his own rules, is endlessly
hounded by white authorities yet is his own worst
enemy. Small wonder that Wilson's favorite "go-to"
actor, Charles S. Dutton, originated the role on Broadway.
Gainey delivers Boy Willie's humor, empathy, and haplessness,
but he's not very dangerous or volatile, depriving
the simple plotline of a needed jolt of menace, and
his quest to sell the piano seems more a matter of
pig-headedness than building desperation. Although
Pryor directs cleanly for most of the story, his busy,
muddy staging of the final scene, a rapidly developing
confrontation that leads to a surprise resolution,
seems off the mark.
As seems to be a constant for M Ensemble, the production
values are decidedly uneven. Dudley Pinder's set and
lighting design is simple, no-nonsense realism, with
little sense of mood or magic to support Wilson's
rich imagery. Sure, M's modest production budget,
like that of other, even smaller South Florida theaters,
demands a lot of "making do." But someone
is not sweating the details. Though the thoughtful,
understated costume design is a decided plus, tiny
discrepancies suggest a lack of follow-through. Boy
Willie and Lymon arrive in suitable work clothes,
but the clean, pressed look reveals more attention
from the wardrobe manager than devotion to the storyline:
Two or three days of driving a truck up from Mississippi
should result in at least a few wrinkles. These characters
look like they own a dry cleaner. The same applies
to the props -- the story is set in the 1930s, but
the colorful, plastic-handled screwdriver and some
aluminum dolly casters scream Home Depot, not Depression-era
Pittsburgh.
Fuente:
New Times
Diciembre
- 2003
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