TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
It’s always pleasant, when viewing a play, to be in on the inside
jokes -- and at South Coast Repertory, the jokes are not only inside,
they’re right down the street.
With “Everett Beekin,” his fifth world premiere at SCR, playwright
Richard Greenberg takes some comic potshots not only at his New York
Jewish heritage, but at Costa Mesa and Orange County circa 2000. It’s a
play that will work equally well, for different reasons, on both the left
and right coasts.
Greenberg’s first act is set on Manhattan’s Lower East Side just after
World War II, and the Yiddish is thick enough to be cut with a knife. The
descendants of some of these characters occupy the second act -- played
by the same actors -- and the local satire is equally chunky, directed
with wit and insight by Evan Yiopoulis.
Part I, subtitled “The Shabbas Goy” for a gentile invited to Jewish
homes on the Sabbath to perform tasks forbidden to his hosts, generally
consists of two sisters at a kitchen table kaffeklatch dissecting their
friends, husbands and -- when she’s out of the room -- their old-country
mother. The non-Jewish suitor of their ailing sister negotiates an ocean
of hostility in his quest to marry his beloved and move her to
California.
Though they never make it, that some of the family goes bi-coastal is
evident in the second act, “The Pacific,” as present-day family members
entertain a sour relative from New York whose views of California are
slightly to the left of Woody Allen’s. This is where Greenberg’s
delicious satire seeps in, opening with a prim society lady’s guided tour
of the bridge connecting the SCR complex with South Coast Plaza.
That visitor -- a welcome return by Kandis Chappell, one of SCR’s more
accomplished and most sorely missed actresses -- proceeds to dissect West
Coast culture with an acidic tongue. In one of her most stinging
diatribes, she envisions “a Crime Walk at Disneyland where visitors can
share in a true urban experience.”
Chappell and Nike Doukas (the aforementioned guide) also are the
sharp-tongued sisters of the first act, who handle the Old World dialogue
with equal ease. Doukas’ interpretation of the social butterfly in Act II
is also right on target.
The formidable mother of Act I, who would barricade the door against
the Gentile visitor if she could, is delivered with bitter comic sourness
by Carole Goldman, who takes an almost mute cameo in Act II.
Adam Scott shifts gears from the poised, ingratiating, ambitious
suitor Jimmy in Act I to the vacuous, clueless Ev in the second act, at a
loss when his bride takes a powder on their wedding day. An extended
sequence involving cultural opposites Chappell and Scott is a superior
piece of character delineation.
Tessa Auberjonis, a virtual no-show as the sickly Miri in Act I,
impresses as the bewildered bride-to-be in the second act, making a
necessary connection with the past to better define her future.
Jeff Allen does much with little actual dialogue both as Chappell’s
doltish husband in New York and Scott’s more sophisticated but equally
reticent father in California.
Scenic designer Chris Barreca has an opportunity to work with
traditional and modern settings in the same play, creating a stuffy New
York apartment in Act I and the smoothly alternating modernistic settings
that define the second act.
True, the structure of “Everett Beekin” is gimmicky, but Greenberg
provides some delicious insights into his characters in both past and
present elements, serving up sweet substance with his juicy satire. The
title character would take several paragraphs to fully explain; suffice
to say his personage is pivotal to both segments.
A “Goy’s Guide to Yiddish” is provided in the program for the benefit
of those unfamiliar with the genre, but the concept is not that difficult
to grasp. Seldom has a play so basically conversational delivered such
pure hilarity.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Everett Beekin”
WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 2:30 and 7:45 p.m until Oct. 8.
COST: $28-$49
CALL: (714) 708-5555
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