Maggie’s Riff
Jon Lipsky
Paul Rodriguez as Jack Kerouac |
In wrinkled, open trench coat and smoking like a fiend, he
wanders up to the 1950s-era mike in a fog-filled room and starts to ramble a
story in his Northeastern way of forming his words. Some of what he says in the beginning is a
bit cryptic (“Been doing a bit of babble since I had this flip”), but then he
suddenly gets energized by some spark in his alcohol-wracked mind to tell a
story about his teenage self rather than reading as planned from his famous
travelogue, On the Road. The coat comes off, another cigarette is lit,
his erect nipples pop through the ribbed t-shirt, and he starts a five-part
confession about his first love, Maggie.
Thus begins a time-travel, dream-like exploration of famed
author and Beat generation hero, Jack Kerouac, as related in Jon Lipsky’s
jazz-infused play, Maggie’s Riff, now
in a powerfully gripping production by Faultline Theater, staged at San
Francisco’s PianoFight. The play begins
in some small nightclub of the early 1960s where Kerouac supposedly has been
invited to do a reading of the book universally hailed as the era’s
counterculture-defining tome. Instead,
he redirects the evening into an exploration of a past relationship that has
continued as such a strong thread in his life that it appears difficult for him
to separate what is real (i.e., a girlfriend back in his hometown of Lowell,
Massachusetts named Mary Carney) and what is fiction (i.e., a recent book he
has published with strong autobiographical elements about one Jack Dulouz
falling for one Maggie Cassidy). The
play rips in, out, and between scenes of the author’s whisky-infused
storytelling on this early 60s stage; his concurrent, desperate attempts to
overcome a writer’s block in a Big Sur shack to begin his next novel; and fond,
foggy memories from his senior year in Lowell, Massachusetts. In the shadowed background, a sax and its
player moans, scats, roars, be-bops, and riffs to tie the scenes together, to
underline the storyline, and to help point Jack along the way on his memory
journey.
JD Scalzo as Mouse, Paul Rodrigues as Jack & Nicole Odell as Maggie |
With an uncanny resemblance to early, 1940s photographs of
the real Jack Kerouac, dark-browed, solid-cheeked Paul Rodrigues dives into the
role of the writer and performer with inspired insight, intensity, and
ingenuity. As the sixteen-year-old Jack,
he brings both attractive bashful, ‘aw shucks’ boyishness as well as brass,
bold, and ballsy flamboyance. Rarely
have I seen a more fiercely athletic performance as he runs in-place with spinning,
sweat-inducing steps as the star of a track meet or as he throws his body to
the ground or against a wall in teenage tumble and angst. When palling around with his best bud, Mouse,
he is a jumping jack of energy and crazy moves and a constant flow of
wisecracks, friendly punches, and big bear hugs with his bro. When trying to woo the older, seventeen-year-old
Maggie, he is awkward and shy yet persistent and persuasive as he maneuvers
toward that first kiss (something she actually makes happen to his total
surprise and delight).
But as the older Jack who is reminiscing in a hazy dream
that even he does not seem to quite know if it ever happened or not, Paul
Rodrigues is particularly stunning in his portrayal. With head always cocked to one side and eyes
that strain to see something in the past that can help him maneuver his
present, the early 1960s Jack is clearly haunted by something his younger self
and Mouse intone together: “Your only love is your first love, and your death
is your last.” That first love clearly
is still with Jack, and getting beyond its haunting effects twenty years later
is the nut he has to crack to get the silent typewriter clicking again.
Nicole Odell is Maggie, the hometown idol that Jack worships
and makes into a goddess that she herself does not especially aspire to
be. Maggie is a flirty local gal who
loves her Grammie, from whom she has learned how to kiss with passion and to
whom she tells all her secrets. She is
clearly drawn to this boy younger than she with his cocky confidence mixed with
cute clowning. Ms. Odell brings subtle
sexiness to Maggie that has a rich sense of rawness to it without ever seeming
in any way slutty. There is also a
wonderful vulnerability that she exudes and she protects, especially as Jack
eventually goes off to New York for college and begins his journey to stardom
apart from Lowell, where she remains.
She is dreamy throughout Jack’s telling, fading in and out of the story,
living out his own efforts to discern how real she was in life versus on his
printed page.
Jack (Paul Rodrigues) & Mouse (JD Scalzo) |
Zig to his Zag, Mouse is Jack’s loyal sidekick, constant fellow
jokester, and biggest fan and supporter.
JD Scalzo is so much fun to watch as he careens all over the stage in
constant swirls and swaggers, dips and ducks of his lean, ever-moving body. Out of his mouth flows a river of rapid
torrents of friendly and taunting, boy-to-boy banter. His face is full of smile one moment and a
feigned look of shock and surprise the next, all part of his ongoing teenage
act of spontaneity. Together with Jack,
the two are a dance of exploding testosterones and sometimes a dance of two
guys who clearly a are trying to discern what is this other magnetic, arousing attraction
between them beyond just being best bros.
Jack Listens to Dr. Sax (Rich Lesnik) |
While we never see more than just his shadow, Rick Lesnick
as Dr. Sax is a pervasive, important part of Jack’s story. His tender and trumpeting saxophone as well
as his gravelly singing, chanting, and echoing voice provide color and context
to the stories playing out on the other side of the screen.
Cole Ferraiuolo directs with a feverish pace the
ever-shifting timelines, locations, and moods of this story of part realism,
part fantasy; and he does so in a manner always in his well-staged control. The dream effects of a memory affected by
years of alcohol are enhanced by the use of scenes of shadow designs by Alisa
Javits and by acutely planned and executed lighting by Maxx Karzunski. Brook Jennings leads us back and forth from
the ‘40s and ‘60s and from blue-collar Lowell to uptown New York with her
choice of period costumes. Adam Lipsky’s
music plays a major role in setting the scene and telling the story through
1940s bebop and 1950s/60s jazz. Along
with Brittany White’s well-chosen props and Evan Wardell’s sound design, this
production team has stepped in to support in a big time manner the small,
intimate stage of this PianoFight setting.
If there is some slippage in the story from time to time as
fast dialogue, shifting scenes, and foggy boundaries between Jack’s story and
Jack’s reality make it a bit difficult to follow what just happened, the
faultline (pun intended) is ever-so slight and soon forgotten. Overall, Faultline Theater has assembled is a
stellar cast and production team to fill almost too quickly the extremely
enjoyable, ninety minutes of Jon Lipsky’s Maggie’s
Riff.
Rating: 4 E
Maggie’s Riff
continues through June 11, 2016, produced by Faultline Theater at PianoFight,
144 Taylor Street, San Francisco.
Tickets are available online at http://www.faultlinetheater.com/.
Photos by Clive Walker
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