Gripping ‘Grapes of Wrath’ at Golden West
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Tom Titus
It’s difficult for most of us to imagine a time when proud farmers
fled the wind-ravaged Oklahoma dust bowl for an uncertain future as
migrant workers in the “promised land” of California, but John
Steinbeck chronicled this period most notably in his novel “The
Grapes of Wrath.”
The book that spawned a celebrated movie version in 1939 is the
basis for playwright Frank Galati’s achingly gripping stage
adaptation, which Golden West College currently is presenting as a
dark, often dismal but ultimately uplifting production.
“Grapes of Wrath” follows the Joad family, “Okies” blown out of
their farm and onto the road in a dilapidated truck, headed west on
Route 66. Director Tom Amen has captured the journey mile after
frustrating mile in a lengthy, but richly rewarding, staging.
The play’s first act chronicles the Joads’ trials and tribulations
on the westward journey. The second act focuses on the cruelty and
prejudice they encounter at the end of the trail. Both center on the
young adult Tom Joad, newly released from prison after killing
another man in a fight, striving to conform to society’s dictates,
but possessed of a furious passion for justice that often becomes
dominant.
Joshua Matheson enacts the hard-headed Tom with a steely sense of
outrage, quick to anger and just as quick to realize the risk he’s
taking. Matheson’s sinewy performance anchors the GWC production,
which offers a goodly number of individual accomplishments in its
huge ensemble cast.
It’s easy to see where Tom gets his pugnacious attitude -- his
mother is a feisty, straight-talking woman played superbly by Renata
Florin in a welcome return to the Golden West stage. Tom’s father,
played by Steven Silva in another fine performance, is depicted as
more of a compromiser, preferring not to make waves.
Outstanding as an itinerant ex-preacher who hitches a ride with
the westbound Joads is Blake Coomb. His conflicted character
establishes a tone that prevails among many of the travelers. Michael
Witherell is fine as Tom’s randy younger brother, while Gwen
Wooldridge and Jim Perham beautifully interpret the family’s frail
grandma and grandpa, who lack the physical strength for the journey.
Mark Bedard, one of the college’s strongest performers, takes on
several roles in the production, principally as a guitar-strumming
narrator, but also as several characters the Joads meet along the
way, blowing a harsh gust of reality against their dreams.
Christa Mathis delivers another excellent portrayal as Rose of
Sharon, a pregnant relative whose life-affirming act at the close of
the play offers a modicum of hope. Bruce Alexander plays Tom’s
conflicted uncle, ultimately overcome by his thirst, while Nick Cook
has a few rich, and diametrically opposed, cameos as two men on
different “welcoming committees,” and Kathleen Fabry chills the air
as a religious zealot running up against the steely resolve of Ma
Joad.
The Golden West setting, initially a stretch of sun-baked land,
later modified with necessary set pieces, is strikingly crafted by
Sigrid Hammer Wolf. Susan Thomas Babb’s costumes strongly establish
the drab 1930s atmosphere, while Leigh Allen’s lighting and Scott
Steidinger’s sound -- particularly during a violent rainstorm so
realistic that viewers might cover their heads with their programs --
are first rate.
“Grapes of Wrath” is an epic production, stretching into three
hours, but it also is a mesmerizing lesson both in history and
humanity that should be experienced.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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