Hearts of Palm
Patricia Milton
Frieda de Lackner as Vi & John Patrick Moore as Strap |
On the Southeast Asia island of Marititu, two corporate-type
women ready themselves for negotiations with the locals over acquiring major
land plots for their mega-company, Empire Holdings. They do so by trading personal jabs about who
is and is not qualified enough to sit at the table. Recently transferred from Media to
Negotiations, Vi argues to the more senior Brittany that she knows pressure as recently
proven when she received “bags and bags of hate mail written in crayons” from
furious Brownies wanting palm oil out of their Girl Scout cookies. The two reach an uneasy truce, agreeing that
their negotiated settlement with the islanders for land must meet the criteria
of being environmentally clean and no displacement of residents. That the two possible plots for sale each
negate one of those must-haves only gives their reluctant handshake more squeezed
pump.
So begins Patricia Milton’s latest play, Hearts of Palm, now
in its world premiere at Berkeley’s Central Works. What seems to start as a serious play that
immediately raises questions about big, global companies coming in to
non-developed countries and leveling both forests and villages for big profits
soon begins to shift in tone. When the
native negotiator arrives, she explains that it is local custom to express
regret not from one’s heart, but to apologize from one’s backside. (Huh?)
New corporate members arrive on the scene unexpectedly -- one being a sleazy
guy named “Strap” with eyes and hands that wander to Vi’s back side (but not to
express regret) and one being a snarling woman from Human Resources swaggering
about in dark glasses and toting a sidearm.
As the shift to full-out farce quickens, more and more
issues that are potentially serious topics for a play are plopped on the
table: corporate greed in a global
economy, global warming, stereotypes of Islamic people, terrorism, sexism and
male-assumed dominance within the corporate setting. At the same time, the staged situations and
the characters before us become more and more like those seen in cartoons or
B-rated summer blockbusters.
Unfortunately, the result is a play that is an oft-over-the-top parody
of so many different aspects of the current corporate, political, and social
realms that messages get mixed up, intertwined, and finally mired in comedic
attempts that are more often just silly rather than funny and effective.
Frieda de Lackner is the rapid-talking Vi whose intensity to
make points is accentuated by hands that move almost as fast and furious as her
tongue. Widowed recently when her
husband (also a negotiator at Empire) was in a suspicious jeep accident in
Uganda (and whose ashes are in her 24-Hour Fitness gym locker ... Don’t ask),
she is seeking to honor his memory by becoming the best dealmaker she can be. Determined to be in charge of these
negotiations for outcomes she deems as best, Vi constantly makes moves as if
playing a virtual chess game.
Vi also has to contend with Strap, a one-night stand colleague
who has traveled across the globe to these jungles hoping for more from her (promising
this time to “bring a toothbrush,” “use a bed instead of a table,” and “take
off our clothes”). John Patrick Moore
has eyes that rarely leave Vi and a relentless persistence to be in charge of
the negotiations, their outcome, and Vi herself. When the two negotiate with the native
representative, he is quick to interrupt, confront with outlandish suggestions,
and make side comments as if the local person cannot hear or see him. Mr. Moore uses a volume of facial ticks and
tricks to convey Strap’s lust for power and sex; and he is as much a corporate
clown as any parody could ever want.
Erin Mei-Ling Stuart at Brittany |
Vi’s initial internal competitor, Brittany, disappears by
Scene 2 (following a bombing of the company’s local office) and is feared dead
or kidnapped. Erin Mei-Ling Stuart later returns as Brittany in a Patty Hearst
fashion (with Mace can rather than shotgun), tattooed and bearing a headband,
now a member of the local, indigenous farmer rebels. Her Brittany is aggressive in tone and
stance, full of fast words, and a caricature of the “white savior” who has
decided to save the natives from her fellow, country invaders.
Michelle Talagrow as Ni-Bethu |
Also at the negotiating table is Ni-Bethu, played with
stealth and sarcasm by Michelle Talgarow.
In full South Sea Islander dress (thanks to Tammy Berlin’s designs),
Ni-Bethu is not about to take any crap from these Americans and lets them know
in no uncertain terms that she has studied their corporate ways and has also
been to Harvard (something which each has made a claim to at one time or
another in their back-and-forth one-up-man-ship). While her own motives for profit are in
constant suspicion by the others, there is something deeper going on behind
that expressionless, noble face; and there is something happening between her and
the other two women at the table, with Strap having no clue to the subtle and
obvious clues and notes passing among them.
The most bizarre of all these characters is Helen, the Red-Bull-chugging
HR (Human Resources) woman from hell.
Somewhere, sometime, the playwright must have had one of Alexander’s
terrible, horrible, no good, very bad days with an HR person. Jan Zvaifler’s Helen has rope and rubber pipe
in hand to deal with an employee performance issue, a meeting she seems to
anticipate with bated breath. She talks
on walkie-talkie to security forces she commands who blow up jeeps and
buildings. Helen is an ex-Marine who has
never given up the uniform and walks around as if in full command of a war
zone, which she is fast trying to insure Marititu will be.
One of the biggest challenges Gary Graves has as director, I
believe, is to make this farce work in a very intimate, conference room space,
surrounded on three sides by just a couple rows of audience. In my opinion, some distance between setting,
cast, and audience might help the comedy/farce be played out in ways that would
make it funnier versus just ridiculous.
While the situations, script, and acting do elicit some laughter, there
is not the response one would expect from such outlandish exaggerations of
corporate processes, procedures, and so-called professionals. It is too often difficult to ascertain if
what is happening is now a serious side of the play with meaning and message we
are to take away or is it just another moment of parody and maybe we should
laugh.
But such is the nature of world premieres. Risks are well worth it when introducing a
new work, and with its fifty-second original play now on its stage, no company
knows or revels more in that fact than Central Works.
Rating: 3 E
Hearts of Palm
continues in extension through August 21 in a world premiere by Central Works
at the Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Avenue, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at www.centralworks.org or by calling
510-558-1381.
Photos by Patricia Milton
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