Golden West to sink teeth into ‘Grapes’
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Tom Titus
Trivia question: What novel, written in 1939, was the basis for the
Tony Award-winning best play on Broadway for 2000?
Hint: The 1940 movie version made a star out of its leading actor,
who went on to become a Hollywood legend, winning his only Oscar a
few months before his death.
Give up? The answer is “Grapes of Wrath,” John Steinbeck’s classic
novel, which will burst onto the stage of Golden West College next
weekend as one of the school’s most ambitious productions. The
movie’s star, of course, was Henry Fonda.
“The play is truer to the novel than John Ford’s film, capturing
more of Steinbeck’s anger, as well as more of the raw, controversial
tone of the novel,” director Tom Amen said. “Whereas the film is a
somewhat sanitized version of the novel, the play captures the edgy
quality of it. For this reason, it is intended for mature audiences.”
Steinbeck’s book tracked the journey of Oklahoma farmers, beaten
down by the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, to what was supposed to be the
promised land of California. The hardships they encounter along the
way form the spine of the story.
“For as long as I can remember, I have been drawn to the work of
John Steinbeck,” Amen said. “When I was a young man, my father gave
me a collection of Steinbeck’s short novels and I was immediately
captivated by them.
“On the title page of the book, my father wrote, ‘Steinbeck had an
uncanny ability to use his own experiences and surroundings to
develop fiction that makes people believe,’” the director recalled.
“‘If it took getting his nose dirty to do it, he got his nose dirty.’
I wish I had written those words, because I think my father hit the
nail squarely on the head.”
Amen describes the novel as “ultimately a celebration of all that
is noble and virtuous in people. Steinbeck’s story clings tenaciously
to the vanishing qualities of social responsibility, loyalty to
family, charity, generosity of spirit and strength of character.
“Furthermore, Steinbeck had a wonderful sense of compassion for
his characters. In ‘The Grapes of Wrath,’ Steinbeck has endowed his
characters with an inner strength and sense of humor that sustains
them through hardship and misery.”
Amen has cast one of his most accomplished student actors, Joshua
Matheson, in the central role of Tom Joad, while playing Ma and Pa
Joad are two performers who need no introduction at Golden West --
Renata Florin (returning after a lengthy absence) and Stephen Silva.
Completing the principal roles will be Blake Coomb, Bruce
Alexander, Michael Witherell, Dax McKeever, Christa Mathis, Jim
Perham, Gwen Wooldridge and Scott Finn. Golden West veteran Mark
Bedard will enact the narrator, musician and other key characters.
“Steinbeck’s novel, and Frank Galati’s brilliant adaptation of it,
is far more than a historical chronicle of a particular time and
place,” Amen said. “‘The Grapes of Wrath’ is a warning, a wake-up
call to a world that was then, and is now, poisoned by intolerance,
bigotry and fear. If for no other reason than this, ‘The Grapes of
Wrath’ remains a very resonant, provocative and hauntingly beautiful
story -- a story that still has the enduring power to make people
believe.”
Amen cautions that the play contains adult themes and is not
suitable for children.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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