HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us |
A CurtainUp Review
Hold Please
---Our Original Review of the South Coast Rep premiere of Hold Please
London Review- by Stanley Nemeth Early in the first act of Hold Please, Annie Weisman's comedy in its world premiere at South Coast Repertory, the young protagonist Erica clutches a bright red, heart-shaped talisman of sorts to her breast. We're at the start of an all female employee "heart talk" and Erica speaks the words "I think." No sooner are these out of her mouth than she's pulled up short by her older, bossy colleague Agatha and commanded to rephrase her words as "I feel". Here we have a wonderfully telling introduction to Weisman's postmodern corporate world. Below the forced camaraderie of this imagined workplace and firmly entrenched among the generations of women employed there is the thinly veiled tyranny of old-fashioned "male"hierarchical structure still alive and well. Weisman's is a world where feelings now reign - - rational distinctions along with due process having been discarded as incompatible with current schemes of wealth and power - - but one whose feelings are quickly exposed as not of the warm fuzzy sort. Rather, what rules in this world where all still prey on all is a desire to devour the other. A metaphorical cannibalism by the corporation of its employees - - it chews them up and then spits them out - - is matched by the eagerness of the employees to do the same thing, whether to their children (comically, as revealed in one of Weisman's most inspired and thematically relevant comic riffs) or to one another, through rabid competitiveness, vengefulness, and sexual exploitation. These are the "feelings" which largely occupy the hearts of the four central female characters, The otherwise seemingly harmless clerical types who answer phones and take messages, engage in lengthy tete-a-tetes, drink Starbucks Ventis, eat Nutter Butters, or read Oprah's Magazine at their desks or in the coffee area of the firm resoundingly named Solomon, Xavier, Greenspan, and Sachs. Ms. Weisman is writing in Neil LaBute territory. Her play could justly be subtitled In The Company Of Women. The action of the play unfortunately rests on two excessively slender plot strands. The first features the bossy Agatha as detective. She "feels" the younger Erika is hiding something, so she uses her colleague Grace as a work tool to ferret it out. At convenient moments, Agatha repeats her hunch that Erika is hiding something. There's little else in the way of dramatic structure to lend forward momentum to the first act action. Dialogue trumps the imitation of an action. In the second act, events are shaped by the decision of a newly hired MBA, a 24-year-old first female executive at the firm (she doesn"t appear onstage) to carry out "an efficiency estimate." Though the four main characters "feel" this will entail downsizing, most are confident they will not be the corporate "losers." I won't reveal the consequences of this plot thread except to point out that they involve inadequately motivated confessionsand final dispositions more convenient than dramatically probable. This South Coast Repertory production is most likely all that the playwright could wish for. The acting is consistently polished. The four leads are all so good in delivering the dialogue and in conveying both the generational differences and the dispiriting samenesses among workers that it would be unfair to single out any one of them for particular praise: Tessa Auberjonois shines as the troubled Erika; Kimberly K. King the manipulative Agatha; Linda Gehringer, the relatively mild and chirpy work tool, Grace; Jillian Bach the hyperactive upwardly mobile Valley Girl ,Jessica). The direction by Mark Rucker is by and large nicely paced given the tendency of the writing to bog down in excessively lengthy two character encounters or amusing if irrelevant riffs. The costumes by Joyce Lee Kim (ranging from the prim and proper, to the clashing, to the openly tarty) are all highly suitable to the characters. Christopher Acebo's attractive set, consisting of three workplace areas, allows for the maximum in quick and smoothly moving changes of place. The 28-year-old author, who this season has enjoyed world premieres at both La Jolla Playhouse and South Coast Repertory, has been widely and justly praised for her fine ear for dialogue. So note perfect is she in capturing her characters' "totallys" and "whatevers" that it might appear ungracious to suggest that too much of a good thing isn't always wonderful. A case in point is Jessica's "White Out" rap song in the second act. Though undeniably amusing, it's hard to see how this interpolation adds anything to our insight into Jessica, to the play's ideas, or to an elegant resolution of the action. Moreover, it's too cartoonish. It might be more suitable were Jessica to make an appearance on South Park. but doesn't seem worth the using up of valuable stage time from Hold Please. Weisman is a writer of remarkable talent. If she comes in time to agree with W. Somerset Maugham that any stage writer "can write dialogue, but very few can craft a dramatic action", she might well turn into the dramatist of genius some quarters, too eager to devour new writers and then spit them out, are already proclaiming her.
|
At This Theater Leonard Maltin's 2003 Movie and Video Guide Ridiculous!The Theatrical Life & Times of Charles Ludlam Somewhere For Me, a Biography of Richard Rodgers The New York Times Book of Broadway: On the Aisle for the Unforgettable Plays of the Last Century 6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by CurtainUp's editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |