‘Mother’ a difficult assignment
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TOM TITUS
Marsha Norman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “‘night, Mother” is not
an easy assignment for college students, no matter how advanced. Nor
is it easy to watch, though it occupies just 75 minutes of the
playgoer’s time.
Norman’s two characters, a mother and daughter, both living
unfulfilled lives, are spending their last evening together -- before
the daughter takes her own life. Orange Coast College’s Repertory
Theater has taken on this project with mixed results.
In director Samantha Wellen’s gradually involving production, the
mother (Averie Huffine) and her daughter (Courtney Barr) spend a good
portion of the play in merely conversational conflict. The reality of
the drama doesn’t really kick in until the last 10 or 15 minutes.
Presumably guarding against peaking too early, Wellen’s actresses
spend much of the early part of the play in rushed monotones,
building toward the climax in which the mother makes a desperate
appeal to her determined daughter. If some of this urgency were
incorporated in the first half-hour, the effect on the audience would
be magnified.
Huffine reasonably portrays the physical limitations of her
character’s age, but the horror she must feel when she learns early
on of her daughter’s intentions never really surfaces. The ability is
there, as she proves later on; it’s just late in manifesting itself.
Barr is more successful as the thirtyish daughter in good health
(despite epilepsy which hasn’t impacted her in over a year), who
decides life holds no more attraction for her. As she meticulously
stocks her mother’s kitchen and insures that all her future needs
will be met, Barr is almost a robotic presence, which oddly enough
works for this character.
Even at its brevity, “‘night, Mother” contains much filler
material about the young woman’s disappointing but hardly
suicide-inducing life. What this prize-winning play lacks is an
overriding motive for such a drastic decision.
David Scaglione’s kitchen / living room setting is splendidly
realistic, and Mark Roudybush’s pre-show soundtrack conveys the bleak
mood, at least when the lyrics of the high-volume songs can be
understood.
*
South Coast Repertory’s Junior Players, one of the advanced
performance ensembles in the theater’s youth and teen programs, is
presenting its spring production, “The Trials of Alice in
Wonderland,” in the theater’s Nicholas Studio this weekend.
The musical play, under the direction of Hisa Takakuwa, focuses on
Lewis Carroll’s young heroine, who is placed on trial for
“conspicuous behavior.” Present in the courtroom are the King and
Queen of Hearts, the White Rabbit and the Mad Hatter, among other
familiar figures.
Cast members are youngsters in grades five through eight who have
been selected through an audition process after completing at least
two years of training in Theater Conservatory’s youth program at
South Coast Repertory. Students in the Teen Players will present
their spring production, “Club / Underworld,” May 21 to 29.
Performances of “Alice” will be given Saturday and Sunday at 1 and
4 p.m. Tickets, at $7, may be ordered by calling the box office at
(714) 709-5555.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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