TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
There really is no comparison in quality or presentation between the
two one-act plays being staged by Orange Coast College’s Repertory
Theater Company. How do you compare a work by a Pulitzer Prize-winning
author to one by a local playwright being staged for the first time?
OCC’s student company is staging “Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer,”
an early one-act by Jason Miller, who won the Pulitzer for “That
Championship Season” three decades ago. Alongside that, the company is
performing a touching drama set before and years after the Holocaust,
“Where Were You on Your Ninth Birthday?” Both are set in 1972, with
flashbacks to 1942 in “Ninth Birthday.”
Both plays are directed by Alex Golson, longtime supervisor of OCC’s
drama program, but he’s chosen the cream of the student crop for “Lou
Gehrig.”
In “Gehrig,” Miller has chosen a pair of themes that most audiences
can identify with -- Little League sports and community theater. Victor
is a hot-tempered Italian coach of a boys’ baseball team and his wife,
Barbara, is a local actress preparing to open in a production of “Hedda
Gabler.”
If you mused, “not much in common,” you’d be so right. Greg McClure
and Jessica Marie Hutchinson have a field day with these roles,
beautifully stressing their contrasting qualities without slipping over
the edge into parody. McClure gradually reveals the humanity beneath the
machismo, while Hutchinson seethes with frustration over a marriage gone
sour.
It would take a miracle to save this union, and the one that arrives
-- Miracle Laurie as the mother of a frustrated ballplayer -- does not
have this mission in mind. Laurie’s tentative politeness melts McClure’s
rabid defensiveness, and there’s a good indication at the fade-out that
there’ll be a good deal of their story yet to tell.
“Where Were You on Your Ninth Birthday?” is a drama about the
aftermath of the Holocaust written by a survivor, George Rothman, who
obviously is basing his main character’s experiences on his own. It’s a
noble effort that would benefit from an injection of the visceral
strengths in the “Lou Gehrig” play.
David (Michael Cavinder) is a Californian who was rescued from the
Hitler regime as a young boy in Paris. It’s something he doesn’t care to
reminisce about, and the desires of his wife (Malia Fee) to visit Israel
kindle fervent opposition.
Flashback to Paris in 1942 as David’s parents (Rachael Maddalena and
Matthew McCabe) anguish over the fate of their son when the Nazis come
for them. A kindly French couple (Henry Wyatt Moore and Anne Gray)
arrange for his placement in an orphanage as a Catholic, thereby saving
his life.
Of the cast, only Maddalena delivers the wrenching performance that
draws the audience into her plight. Physically and emotionally, she is
perfect for her assignment, and she carries it off with tear-inducing
power. McCabe has some occasional poignant moments as her tormented
husband.
Cavinder starts at a disadvantage. His character, by simple math,
should be 49 in 1972, but the actor appears barely into his 20s (changing
the time from ’72 to, say, 1956 might help). Nevertheless, he delivers an
effective interpretation, though much is left on the surface.
Fee is soft and supportive as his wife, but a little grit could
enhance the conflict. Gray and Moore are quite bland as the French
benefactors.
There is enough substance in the premise to use as a foundation in
the construction of a fine, thought-provoking play. It will be
interesting to trace its development.
FYI
WHAT: “Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer” and “Where Were You on Your
Ninth Birthday?”
WHERE: Orange Coast College Drama Lab Studio, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
WHEN: Closing performances 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m.
Sunday.
COST: $5 or $6
CALL: (714) 432-5725
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