‘Seven Guitars’ plays dramatic blues
Tom Titus
Playwright August Wilson’s theatrical backyard is Pittsburgh’s
predominantly black Hill District, where his Pulitzer Prize-winning
dramas “Fences” and “The Piano Lesson” unfolded. It’s a rundown
section of town where, inevitably, dreams go to die.
In “Seven Guitars,” now on stage at UC Irvine’s Claire Trevor
Theater, Wilson’s indelible characters laugh, love, fight, sing and,
yes, kill.
We know shortly after the play begins that the central character’s
dreams of musical stardom will be cruelly snuffed out -- we just
don’t know how, when or why.
Director Eli Simon and his splendid cast bring Wilson’s slice of
life among the less fortunate to a resonating pitch, recalling a time
-- 1948 -- when African Americans were just beginning to rebel
against second-class citizenship.
And some even dared to dream of fame and fortune as they listened
to Joe Louis triumph in the ring on the radio.
Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton is one of these dreamers. As superbly
enacted by Daren Herbert, he is an ex-convict who hasn’t let prison
dull his artistic ambition.
He’s already had a hit record, and he’ll make it to Chicago and
stardom -- once he can get his guitar out of hock. Herbert enriches
his dream-propelled character with the drive and self-confidence
demanded for success in a memorable performance.
As his once-betrayed and now-cautious romantic interest, Angel
Laketa Moore beautifully constructs the layers of her character,
reticent yet entranced with the smooth-talking singer.
Michelle Cowin is a pleasant diversion as her knowing landlady who
takes no guff from the neighborhood trash talkers.
Omar Ricks delivers the evening’s most stunning performance as a
consumptive, deranged tenant farmer raising chickens in the backyard
and pining for the fortune he is convinced in his booze-fueled
delirium that he is due.
His lengthy, drunken screed late in the play is powerfully
delivered.
Windell D. Middlebrooks provides corpulent comic relief as a
harmonica-playing neighborhood character whose jollity masks an inner
torment that he punctuates with a switchblade knife. Charles Maceo
Thornhill IV agreeably enacts the third member of the musical combo,
an easygoing drummer with an eye for the ladies.
Into this menage arrives Ruby, a slinky temptress who delights in
turning the fellows’ heads. Talia Thiesfield fine-tunes this minor
role into a memorable one.
There is an eighth character in the UCI production -- the
magnificent setting designed by Sarah Palmrose, representing a seedy,
two-story building and the backyard of the boarding house, with its
chicken coop, garden and patio.
Live chickens accompany the musical portions of the play in an
atmospheric coup.
UCI has gone the distance on this visceral exercise in comedy,
music and tragedy with a blues background. “Seven Guitars” is an
experience to cherish.
*
BACKSTAGE -- A big congratulations to Vanguard University, whose
production of “The Lion in Winter” from last season was chosen as one
of six entries by the Kennedy Center American College Theater
Festival. The show will vie for top honors Feb. 9 at Phoenix College
in Arizona.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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