Dominion
Alan Olejniczak
Don Wood as Hammon & Genevieve Perdue as Mara |
The cross-shaped, raised, plywood stage with four,
single-paned door frames guarding each of its legs sets the stark scene,
accentuated by a few background, skeletal trees and sustained, plaintive chords
from a string trio in the shadows. With
no props save one bucket of black stones and with actors in Amish-style
clothing, the timing is ominously ambiguous.
Is this Puritan New England akin to The
Crucible, a present day isolated community in Idaho, or some post-apocalyptic
group in a world full of religious fear and rule? San Francisco playwright Alan Olejniczak’s
newest undertaking, Dominion, is an
unsettling, creepy, and totally compelling look at a village whose
male-dominant religion rules every aspect of the dreary, fear-laden lives of
its inhabitants and whose parallels to our world of today are unnervingly too
many. At Last Theatre presents this
world premiere in a tight, tense ninety minutes with a cast that embodies with
great skills the play’s harsh contrasts – both shining and shadowy -- of what
it means to be family and community.
The Cast of "Dominion" |
Hammon is the local prophet and interpreter of Javit, the
god of the sect he oversees with a firm hand.
“Listen to me, I will tell you what to believe,” he tells his flock with
stern voice. Don Wood is the tall,
solemn, and also sad-eyed Hammon somewhere in his fifth or sixth decade of life
who is about to welcome his newest and third wife, the teenage Esther, to his
household. He preaches with chilling
vocals meant to shatter any sinful thoughts of his spellbound congregation and
sends a warning that will later repeatedly echo loud and clear: “It is a sin to
pity those who deserve a just punishment.”
But there is also something weak and weary in those eyes and slumped shoulders
which we also hear in his pained prayer, “I have been made prophet but I have
not heard from you ... Are you there at all?”
The Prophet’s domicile is ruled with an iron fist by First
Wife, the relentlessly dour and aging Mara, who goes ballistic when the newly
arrived Esther’s first act is to shatter a fourth-generation, blue bowl for
biscuit-making. Genevieve Perdue excels
in her portrayal of this woman whose strict and sullen outside slowly gives way
to reveal a deep grief that defines her every moment and movement. In this world of older-male dominance, Ms.
Perdue’s Mara becomes a moving counter-force who undergoes a transformation
that is spell-bounding and inspiring to behold.
The Three Wives: Katharine Otis, Niamh Collins & Genevieve Perdue |
The middle wife is an exceptionally sad-and-plain-faced but
sweet-in-disposition Rachel. Katharine
Otis brings a sense of mystery and foreboding to her Rachel, declaring early
on, “All we do in this house is grieve.”
Rachel is first to smile meekly, first to help, and first to go sit in
the shadows. While a do-gooder, she is
also a believer-at-all-costs. Overlooked
by most when she is in the room, her actions become a searing reminder of what
a lifetime of being fed dogma can do to a person.
Joining this family of sorts is the squeaky-clean-faced, young
Esther, whose red locks peeking out of her white, skull-hugging cap worn by all
the women speak to her beauty and her boldness.
As she and the entire community listens to the preaching of her
husband-to-be, she locks eyes with a young man about her age; and the quick
smile they exchange signals both tantalizing and terrifying times together in
the days to follow. Niamh Collins beings
to her Esther youthful lust for life, genuine compassion for others, and quiet
courage to cross borders supposedly closed to her.
The object of her illicit smile at ‘church’ is Jubal (Alex
Poling), an over-sized version of a still-awkward teenager whose approaching
manhood is about to condemn him to ejection from the community. His widowed mother, Ella defiantly observes,
“Everyone here knows why there are no young men in the village” – a village
where every young woman is grabbed up by another older man for his newest
wife. As Ella, Teri Whipple is yet
another strong woman in this cast whose resistance to the life script
pre-prescribed to her by the males around her is written in her every taut,
unmoving, facial muscle and piercing eyes.
Teri Whipple, Alex Poling, Don Wood & Nathan Tucker |
The most discomfiting member of this clan of sorts is the
crippled Amit, an overly pious, power-seeking Elder whose every move seems
calculated to pounce upon his chance to become the next Prophet (while all the
time declaring his devotion to Hammon, who once saved his life). Nathan Tucker is relentless in his righteous
rants and torrents of threats; and each time he approaches, the loud knocks of
his cane on the planked stage increasingly portend trouble. His portrayal of Amit at times is too eerily in
concert with the words and underlying messages of hate that we hear from
current despots from afar and even presidential politicians too close at hand.
And it is the similarities to our own present times of this
isolated, cult-like group that is most unsettling and spine-chilling -- a group devoted blindly to its “The Book of
Tablets” and ruled with crushing force by its older, male elders. As the play’s scenes unfold before us, one
cannot help but think of dozens of analogies from our own shores and across the
oceans that show up every day on our Internet screens, airwaves, and printed
headlines of angry men shouting how they are right and everyone else is wrong. But what is heartening and hopeful in Alan Olejniczak’s
powerful script is the way the human spirit of the supposedly weakest and most
disenfranchised rises to assert itself above the locked-in-powers-that-be. Those at the top may ring forth with what they
declare is right and wrong; but when those words do not ring true to the Maras,
Ellas, and Esthers of the world, Dominion
offers us hope.
Rik Lopes directs this able cast with the sensitivity,
precision, and conviction the script deserves.
James Hunting has created the set that defines the mood and timelessness
so central to the play’s impact, aided greatly by the shadows and pinpointed
spotlights of Mike Riggs’s lighting design.
Arthur Oliver’s costumes are stunning in their severity and beautiful in
their simplicity. Finally, the original
music of Charlie Gurke as played throughout on violin, viola, and cello accentuates
the air of tension and foreboding while also allowing an opening of beauty and
redemption to creep through.
At Last Theatre steps forward to premiere Alan Olejniczak’s Dominion, a play that at first appears
as somewhere else, maybe years long past, but one that soon speaks of here and
now, that speaks to and of our times.
Rating: 5 E
Dominion continues
its premiere performance through April 23, 2016 at the At Last Theatre, Fort
Mason Center, 2 Marina Boulevard, San Francisco, Building C, 3rd
Floor. Tickets are available at www.atlastheatre.com.
Photos by Claire Rice
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