Get Naked
Frankie and Johnny in bed, in the kitchen, wherever,
it's all good
BY RONALD MANGRAVITE
| One of the intriguing aspects
of the South Florida stage scene is the "branding"
of the many resident companies here. Instead
of cherry-picking specific plays from various
theaters, audiences tend to stick with certain
troupes, regardless of what programming they
offer. And theaters that thrive here do so in
part because they establish clear, marketable
identities. Case in point is GableStage, whose
current production, Frankie and Johnny in the
Clair De Lune, plays to the company's strong
suits: solid direction, provocative material,
and intense, emotionally demanding performances.
The result is decidedly successful, yet another
Joseph Adler production that is so skillfully
understated, it makes a daunting theatrical
challenge appear nearly effortless. |
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The story starts off
with a bang -- literally -- as the lights come up
on the title roles: Frankie, an embittered waitress,
and Johnny, a hyperromantic short-order cook --
in full, naked, spread-eagled sexual congress. Their
physical needs dispensed with, the play then zeroes
in on the really naked stuff: emotional intimacy
and the avoidance thereof. After sex Johnny wants
only one thing -- to stay with Frankie forever.
But unfortunately Frankie wants two quite different
things -- a meat loaf sandwich and for Johnny to
clear out of her rundown Hell's Kitchen flat. Therein
lies the play's conflict and its theme. Is this
a one-night stand or the start of something big?
Johnny waxes eloquent about marriage
and children and the full moon rising outside Frankie's
tenement window. But Frankie can't handle this kind
of talk on a first date. Sex, sure, but romance? Getouttahere.
The script from Terrence McNally offers the audience
a vicarious peek at two ordinary lives confronted
with big life questions. Frankie and Johnny are in
their forties, ordinary looking, lonely, and painfully
aware their lives have little meaning or direction.
Frankie's wary of commitment, still bearing the scars,
physical and emotional, of an abusive relationship.
Johnny's trying to make a comeback after a failed
marriage and a stretch in prison. He studies Shakespeare
and tries to learn the names of the classical music
selections that happen to be playing on her bedside
radio. She's all pessimism, he's boundlessly optimistic.
Despite her rebukes and sarcasm, he won't give up
on the possibility of real love. And what looks like
another sad misconnection begins, with the help of
Bach and Debussy, to show the flickers of real romantic
passion and its redemptive, healing power.
Frankie and Johnny has seen several
incarnations. Kathy Bates scored big in the original
1987 off-Broadway version as the world-weary waitress
whose cynical defenses start to crack under Johnny's
relentless wooing. The 1991 Hollywood film version
starred the stunning, stunningly miscast Michelle
Pfeiffer in the role opposite the grittier, more plausible
Al Pacino. The play enjoyed a popular New York revival
last year and an added celebrity friction when its
two stars, Edie Falco and Stanley Tucci, began a romance
offstage as well as on.
The GableStage production has an on/offstage
story of its own as Adler has cast real-life partners
Avi Hoffman and Laura Turnbull as the hard-luck lovers.
Hoffman's knack for comedic material and his lumpy
middle-age physique match his character well, though
his portrayal lacks a certain desperation and self-delusion,
which would help give more credence to Frankie's doubts
and fears (and more threat to the relationship). The
guy says he's absolutely certain their love can work,
but his history suggests otherwise.
Turnbull nails Frankie's defeatism
and her sarcasm-as-defense mechanisms, but as with
Pfeiffer in the film version, her features and physique
seem rather opposed to some of what the script says
about her character. The basic idea is that Johnny
is attracted to Frankie not because of the way she
looks but in spite of it. These, though, are minor
flaws in what by any measure is an acting tour de
force. Never mind the requirements to display one's
nakedness in sexual situations before a room full
of strangers; this play keeps its two characters onstage
throughout each act without a breather. It's like
an extended doubles skating exhibition -- there's
no room for a fall or a misstep. Both performers acquit
themselves with flying colors.
Adler's direction is particularly
skilled and nearly invisible, as it well should be
in a simple, two-character play. The emotional beats
are clearly defined and the staging, while necessarily
simple, is evocative. Adler uses Tim Connelly's set,
a realistic rendition of a bare, drab New York walkup,
to excellent effect. The décor -- and the sorry
inventory in her refrigerator -- reveal a lot about
Frankie's lonely life. Space has emotional texture
-- the characters battle for the upper hand by claiming
the bed, by occupying the kitchen. So do ordinary
activities -- Johnny woos Frankie with his skill at
chopping onions for an omelet, while the ordinary
act of brushing one's teeth becomes in this production
a sign of acceptance.
Frankie and Johnny, a play from the
1980s, shows its age in some ways. Its assumptions
seem rather quaint. As in Lanford Wilson's Burn This,
another play from the '80s, Frankie and Johnny offers
a Bruce Springsteen worldview -- and a poetic, tortured
working-class hero who longs to transcend his daily
grind through the power of love. To this, McNally
also offers a classic haute bourgeois wish fulfillment
-- that the magic of high culture can enlighten and
humanize the working classes, if only they would let
it. Frankie and Johnny stumble on a classical music
station, only to be mesmerized by Bach's "Goldberg
Variations" as well as Debussy's "Clair
de Lune" (hence the play's title) and the odd
shreds and patches of Shakespeare that Johnny can
remember. A nice daydream but in this colder, harsher
era, when the arts are eviscerated from the schools
and levels of public arts support have reached drought
proportions, and when coarse materialism triumphs
in all areas of private and public life, such sentiments
are even more escapist than they were sixteen years
ago.
What's inescapable today is that productions
such as this and theater companies such as this are
endangered species, brand identity or no. But the
doctor is in, if briefly, and here is my prescription.
Get down to the GableStage and catch this fine show
while you can (if you can -- the show has been held
over an additional week but tickets are flying out
of the box office). Second, wake up to the realities
of Florida life. There is no cushion of philanthropic
largess, no interest from a state government that
seems intent on cutting everything from its budget
except the salaries of the politicians. The arts,
like democracy, require personal participation or
all we will be left with is mass-marketed corporate
consumerism instead of a culture. If you -- yes, you,
personally -- don't take steps now to support courageous,
risk-taking theater companies such as GableStage,
by buying a subscription or mailing in a donation
or rounding up your friends and turning them on to
the several fine companies in this area, I guarantee
that sooner or later, those companies won't be around
anymore. And that day may come faster than you think.
Fuente:
New Times
Septiembre - 2003
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