A disquieting ‘Homecoming’
Young Chang
Harold Pinter’s “Homecoming” incited recent theatergoers to write
bravo letters to South Coast Repertory’s directors for having the guts to
stage a piece so truthful.
Others wrote that they were repulsed by the show, not to mention
disturbed and shocked by Pinter’s examination of our primitive ways.
Some walked out before the show ended.
“But I think that’s fine,” said Colette Kilroy, the sole woman in the
five-person cast. “I think we’re doing our job if we don’t shy away from
the edginess. I think it has to live in a place that is daring and
provocative.”
Kilroy hesitated when asked if she could sum up the story. To sum up
her character Ruth. To boil down, just for the sake of it, the point of
it all.
She took awhile to start speaking. It’s so visceral and raw, Kilroy
began, that it’s difficult to really articulate anything.
“I think Pinter’s hitting on something,” she finally said. “I could
find the logical through line, but what I find so fascinating about him
is he seems to write on the subconscious level well. He’s kind of
dreamlike in it.”
“Homecoming,” which will close on SCR’s Mainstage on Nov. 18, is about
an all-male household that is changed when a woman arrives. Every word is
laden with mystery. Every sentence is economical and of dual purpose.
Every character is raw.
“These men go all the way back to the cavemen, and Ruth goes all the
way back to the cavewomen. It’s a tremendously primal play, and that’s
one of the things I found so glorious about it,” said director Martin
Benson, also a co-founder of SCR.
Max, a sharp-tongued, bitter, retired butcher, lives in London with
his sons Joey and Lenny. Joey, training to be a boxer, is the most
softhearted of the three. Lenny, always in a harsh, sleek suit, is the
difficult son constantly at war with his dad.
Max’s brother Sam is gentle, compassionate and a chauffeur.
Max’s wife, Jessie, has long passed away.
And then Ruth arrives with her philosopher husband, Teddy, Max’s
oldest son.
“Ruth’s power is in her stillness,” Kilroy said. “And her power comes
from a feminine side of her. It’s a feminine strength.”
Teddy is a man of words. He philosophizes about life and situations
instead of getting lost in them. He is conventional and seemingly content
participating in life from a distance. But Ruth has a hunger and thirst
to be needed, to be sensual, to get lost in the thick of things.
Her needs get met in this household of men -- each of whom she affects
in different ways.
“I think all these men are looking for mothers,” said Kilroy, a Malibu
mother of two. “And Ruth gets tremendous satisfaction in being the
mother. She wants to have sex, she’ll be the mother to Joey, she’ll do
the business transactions with Lenny.”
The title “Homecoming” refers to Teddy’s return home, to the men’s
return to a sense of home with the arrival of a woman, and also to Ruth’s
return home -- the place which brings her back to life.
“She will be able to live out these different parts of herself with
these different men,” Kilroy said. “She will be able to express herself.
And the thing is, Ruth must express herself. She can’t be boxed in.”
Pinter’s piece is as much about the characters’ pauses as their words.
A dreamlike quiet, interrupted by both a startling numbness and startling
emotion, hangs over the production.
The mystery was alive behind the curtains too. The actors kept
secrets, hesitant to give away too much of their characters.
“It’s been a process in which a lot hasn’t been discussed,” Kilroy
said. “Our game is to throw each other off.”
The effect is that “Homecoming” hits people where they’re not used to
being hit.
“That was Pinter’s aim. To sit up and take notice, to bring our
attention to something not comfortable,” Kilroy said. “And it might not
be the healthiest place, but we all return home.”
FYI
* WHAT: “Homecoming”
* WHEN: Through Nov. 18, 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 2:30 and 8
p.m. Saturday, and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday
* WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
* COST: $27-$52
* CALL: (714) 708-5555
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.