|
Tea
at Five
Pasadena Playhouse
39 S. El Molino Ave., Pasadena
Through Oct. 2
Tuesday-Friday 8 p.m., Saturday 5 p.m. and
9 p.m.,
Sunday 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Tickets: $37-$42
(626) 356-PLAY
Kate Mulgrew ought to be the first to admit that she was
born to play Katharine Hepburn. Even during her years as
Captain Janeway on Star Trek: Voyager the resemblance was
apparent; today, the manner in which Mulgrew takes command
of the stage demonstrates that she is confident in her
ability not just to impersonate, but to inhabit the late,
great Kate. Tea at Five is a fine biographical sketch of
the iconic actress, and where Matthew Lombardo's
script runs a bit thin, Mulgrew gamely hoists it on her
back to carry it through the end.
The play has toured for several years under the direction
of John Tillinger, and the team has honed it into a razor-sharp
production that spans 50 years of Hepburn's life
in just under two hours. It takes place in two acts, in
1938 and 1983, respectively, within Hepburn's estate
on the Connecticut shore. When we first meet her, in the
privacy of her living room, she poses and postures shamelessly,
even flopping dramatically on her floral sofa with her
hand pressed to her forehead. While entertaining to watch,
this moment nearly succumbs to parody, until Mulgrew begins
to address the audience directly. It's a rather
jarring move, but then the play's intents become
clear -- that we are being granted an intimate peek
into an infamously private life. Purposefully striding
about the stage, the vibrant redhead recounts major moments
in her career, name dropping all along the way. She caustically
addresses her reputation in the business as "box
office poison," but when she loses out on the lead
in Gone With the Wind, her desperation emerges. Lombardo's
material never goes deeper than what we can read in books,
but Mulgrew's performance brings out a vulnerability
and candidness that can't be found on a page.
As the curtain rises on Act 2, Mulgrew pauses a beat before
facing the audience. There is the inevitable gasp, for
Mulgrew is transformed into a picture-perfect elder Hepburn.
She knows it, the director knows it, we all know it --
it's a deliberate move, but entirely effective. Recovering
from a car crash and in the throes of aging and Parkinson's
disease, she still maintains her famous grace and confidence.
This act differs from the first in that it reminisces about
the more complex issues in Hepburn's past, including
her relationship with her parents, her 27-year romance
with Spencer Tracy, and the suicide of her brother. While
a touch more personal than the first act, at times it comes
across as manipulatively sentimental. Surely Hepburn would
never sit around bemoaning her past in front of strangers'
peering eyes. But technicalities aside, Mulgrew makes
this an experience that few others could recreate, and
Tea at Five has the unheard of advantage of appealing
to both Trekkies and Hepburn fans, which are loyal audiences
indeed. -- By Sarika Chawla
Dead End
Ahmanson Theatre
135 N. Grand Ave., L.A.
Through Oct. 16
Tuesday-Friday 8 p.m., Saturday 2 p.m. & 8
p.m.
Sunday 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.
Tickets: $20-$75
213-628-2772
www.TaperAhmanson.com
Nobody can accuse Michael Ritchie of sneaking quietly
into Gordon Davidson's old seat as artistic director
of the Center Theatre Group. Dead End, the first production
of Ritchie's tenure, features a cast of 42 actors,
James Noone's magnificent four-story New York tenement
set, and a 10,000-gallon pool in the orchestra pit standing
in for Manhattan's East River. Sidney Kingsley's
1935 three-act drama about a gang of ragtag kids whose
Manhattan neighborhood is being crowded out by new luxury
housing is rarely revived because of its daunting size.
Ritchie and company are to be commended for dusting off
this slightly creaky piece of Depression-era social commentary
and giving it a lavish and nuanced revival.
Director Nicholas Martin, who first directed the play when
Ritchie ran the Williamstown Theatre Festival, uses Noone's
incredibly detailed streetscape effectively, carefully
choreographing the action to connect intimate, two-character
scenes with the occasional burst of crowds and chaos. The
curved cobblestone alleyway leading upstage provides ample
opportunities for breathless entrances and dramatic, back-turned
exits.
Jeremy Sisto is the biggest name in the cast, bringing
a dim-witted but dangerous edge to Baby-Face Martin, the
gangster on the lam who returns to the hood to visit his
mother (a frightening Joyce Van Patten) and ex-gal-turned-hooker
(a haunting Pamela Gray). A host of L.A. stage vets create
memorable characters, and Kathryn Hahn is a standout as
the big sister of one of the boys, desperate to make a
better life.
But it's the Dead End Kids who win our hearts, from
their cannon-balling into the orchestra pit as the curtain
goes up, to their plaintive song of escaping the slums
as the curtain comes down. Led by Phil of the Future's
Ricky Ullman in an impressively rich and expressive performance,
the young actors playing the local gang embrace the "Scram!"-flavored
dialogue for all it's worth, and frolic and fight
with equally convincing fervor. To quibble, the New York
accents go astray at times, with repeated references to "reform
school" sounding more Pawtucket than Manhattan.
And with barely two hours of stage time, the evening doesn't
need two intermissions. But in an era when theaters gravitate
to three-character, 90-minute plays, Dead End -- with
its epic scope and sheer ambition -- is a worthy endeavor
deserving of applause. -- Christopher Cappiello
|