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North
of Providence & Lila on the Wall
a kate west review
two plays by Edward Allan Baker
directed by Sean Sellars
at the McCadden Place Theater, 1157 N. McCadden Place, Hollywood
Runs July 1 - 11, 2004; Call (818) 247-0087
It
is difficult to achieve a build up of pathos, conflict and climax
all within the constraints of a typical 45-minute one act. Playwright
Edward Allan Baker attempts this in both of his one acts, "North
of Providence" and "Lila on the Wall," now playing
at the McCadden Place Theater. And frankly, he does not quite
pull it off, as the characters in both plays seem unmotivated
so it is not easy to earn the audience's sympathy.
The saving grace of the production is the talent. Laurie Naughton
and Justin Okin are two likeable, sincere, skilled and versatile
actors both with an easy natural stage presence. It is delightful
to witness their commitment to both heavy drama and to having
fun while both excelling at line delivery, especially in the second
piece.
"North
of Providence" is the story of an estranged brother and sister
brought together by the looming death of their ill father. Carol
(Laurie Naughton) begins the play by begging her brother Bobbie
(Justin Okin) to come visit their aging father in the hospital.
They engage in a verbal tug-of-war by her coercing him and him
in turn telling her to leave him alone. This goes on a bit long
and finally ends with Carol giving up and on the verge of walking
out. Bobbie then opens up to her and tells her the real reason
he gave up on living. His father may be dying but Bobbie is already
dead, a ghost of himself, haunted by his past inactions. His immobility
in the past has a stranglehold on him in the present. The play
ends with no real resolution, however, although both actors handle
the Rhode Island accents well and enact the intense dramatic scenes
nicely.
"Lila
on the Wall" is the story of an eager beaver reporter desperately
trying to prove she is ready for the big time. At the scene of
a Jesus sighting reporter Lila (Laurie Naughton) attempts to justify
her life to her charismatic cameraman Carl (Justin Okin). Both
actors are obviously having fun with the lighter roles while maintaining
the integrity of their characters. Carl teachers Lila to let go
of her fear and speak from the heart and both characters bond,
inadvertently inspired by the holy sighting. This is a much more
satisfactory conclusion than the first play.
Director
Sean Sellars deftly maneuvers his actors into interesting stage
pictures, adeptly guiding them through the various highs and lows
of the two pieces. Among the three of them, both actors and director,
the production takes a professional turn. In addition, Set Designer
Michele Miatello creates a versatile set, a depressingly hopeless
bedroom in the first act, converted into a graffiti-ridden depressing
ghetto scene in the second.
Not
the best choice of material, the artists make the most of it,
commanding the audience's attention and respect. It is a nice
peek at our diverse local talent at any rate and for that reason
well worth looking into.
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