The Speakeasy
Bennett Fisher & Nick A. Olivero
Megan Wicks |
A secret location, back alley meetings, required passwords,
strict rules delivered with stern warning, boutonnieres denoting messages, and
an entrance through a Chinese laundry into curtained passages in a basement-world
below – All and more are the beginning parts of an evening of uproarious fun
and mystery at The Speakeasy. The setting is August 2, 1923, in a club
hidden away from the G-men but not at all a secret to the packed, sold-out
crowd of revelers – women who have arrived in flapper dresses decorated in
feathers and flowers, beads and rhinestones and men who have donned suspenders
and spats, gartered sleeves, and lots of black attire. The three-plus-hour evening begins either in
a large nightclub, a crowded casino, or a bar with piano playing and drinks
flowing among the many tables’ inhabitants.
In fact, drinking the offered exotic drinks is close to a requirement
and will play a big part in the continued enjoyment and build-up of the evening
to come as merrymakers begin to roam at will among the several rooms and many
hallways, nooks, and crannies in this Roaring Twenties, underground world of
“illicit” jollity.
Anthony Cistaro & Jessica Waldman |
With over forty actors and a script purportedly of 1500
pages (written by Bennett Fisher & Nick A. Olivero), The Speakeasy is an incredible accomplishment for the production’s
not one, but four directors (Michael
French, Leah Gardner, Erin Gilley, and Nick A. Olivero). Throughout the night, not only are there
ongoing stage shows of comedians, singers, and dancers, there are multiple, ongoing
“happenings” and interactions occurring at any given moment, in any given
setting. With most of the paying guests
dressed in their own costumes, it is often a surprise that the period-attired person
standing or sitting nearby suddenly is interrupting the show with drunken
slurs, angrily throwing cards at the Blackjack dealer, or accusing a waitress
of infidelity.
Zachery Euberg & Theresa Miller |
Partygoers have the choice of staying mostly in one place to
see what develops in that venue, roaming aimlessly around and running into
‘action’ along the way, or following faithfully a particular character room to
room (one probably named right out of The
Untouchables with a nomenclature like Vinnie, Sal, Mickey or Velma, Viola,
Virginia). The result, as touted by the
company itself, is that each partyer is bound to experience a very different
evening from all others. To experience
all the different storylines, characters, and dramas/comedies, a number of visits, we are told, are
necessary -- which may be one reason The
Speakeasy seems to have so many advance, sold-out evenings.
While there is not an overall, evident plot for the evening,
the events of the 1920s era in San Francisco and in the United States are
threaded throughout. Historical events touched upon include the Anti-Saloon
League’s role in the City’s referendum on whether to endorse or not the
country’s constitutional amendment on Prohibition (a vote that the City did
pass), the arrival of Irish immigrants to S.F., the growth of local labor
unions, the growing fear of Commies in the City, and the sudden death of
President Harding at the Palace Hotel ... to name a few.
Adam Simpson & Violet Gluck |
But if one chooses to follow a particular, quirky soul, an
entire set of personal, highly idiosyncratic subplots threads through the
night. One might follow, for example,
Archie (Adam Simpson), a father who drags illegally his young daughter Sarah (third-grader
Edye Dunn, who alternates with Violet Gluck) into the bar and who has a drink-induced set of hard-luck stories
that are revealed bit by bit and an anger that is seething until the liquor
causes it to explode -- emotionally and physically. And his is just one of a couple dozen or more
singular stories that take three hours fully to play out; but stories that most
roving audience members will only catch glimpses here and there.
Attending The
Speakeasy may even pull an innocent, ticket-buying bystander into a
developing story, silly situation, or sudden conflict. While playing Blackjack, I was handed a note by the dealer reading, “When I leave, follow me
... Bring your friend along ... No one else.”
At the designated moment, we followed Dealer Tom through hallways, down
dimly lit steps, and out into an alley.
There we were told that “Tony” said we could be trusted and were given
“$50” worth of chips to play when Tom gave the signal by scratching his
head. We were promised, “You do this
right, we split the winnings; and this is just the first of many dealings we
can have together.” Not to spoil the
outcome but needless to say, not all went as planned. We ended up in a backroom where the big boss
sat waiting with a baseball bat and a lot of threats. Evidently, these types of individual events
in closed-off quarters go on throughout the evening to “the chosen” among us.
Clay David, David Magidson & Anthony Cistaro |
Just as most of us in attendance are boozing it up during
the evening, many of the actors’ characters are likewise as part of their
storyline having a few too many. As the
third hour of the evening hits, the noise level everywhere increases (not from
us, since we as ticketholders are explicitly warned to “speak easy” and only in
whispers to order more drinks). Slurred
group singing erupts; confrontations increase; fights break out; faces are
slapped; and bums are dragged away by bouncers while sung ballads get sadder
from the stage; the guy at the bar starts crying; or the woman on the couch finally
accepts her sad fate in life. And just
when we begin to wonder how will all this ever end, a somewhat predictable but
very clever and well-executed surprise occurs, at which time we all file out
and head home.
The scores -- if not hundreds -- of planned, scripted
interactions filling the evening are supported by a creative team where few
flaws are ever evident. Somehow, lights
dim, focus, shift, and go full-lit at just the right moments to focus on
specific and general actions and events in multiple locations at the same time
– all thanks to the outstanding design of Allen Willner, Gabe Maxson, and Brad
Peterson. The same occurs for sound
effects and piped-in music as designed by Bay Area master, Matt Stines.
Abra Berman’s costumes are eye-popping and a show unto
themselves as scantily clad flappers dance in beads and spangles; gangster
types roam around in their black suits and studded collar pins; and bar patrons
arrive with their life stories highly evident by just the manner of period
clothes they wear. Choreographers
Elizabeth Etler and Kimberly Lester, Fight Coordinator Mark Gabriel Kenney, and
Movement Director Deborah Eliezer all deserve individual kudos for the highly
planned, well-executed floor shows on the stages, fisticuffs in the bars and
hallways, sudden trips/slips onto the floor, and the ability to get the right
characters to the right spots time and again throughout the three hours. Finally, Musical Director Benjamin Prince has
planned the era’s live music that permeates through a five-piece band in the
nightclub and a piano player and various singers in the bar area.
The major criticisms are overall minor and correctable over
time. There are a number of times –
especially in the bar – when a character’s lines and/or song could not be
heard, even though through lighting it was clear all our attentions were to be
placed on that person. For the number of
people that are roaming around and for the length of time of the entire
evening, my companion and I felt another venue or two were needed to help in
terms of increasing variety and of relieving the number of people sometimes
crammed into one room/location. We were
both struck by “how white” the entire cast of forty-plus is. That felt noticeable and uncomfortable in a
City where there is so much diversity among actors and where color-blind
casting is so much the norm (even realizing the speakeasies of the time period
would have likely been all Caucasian in performers, staff, and revelers).
Finally, while the evening is overall fun and fairly fast
moving, by the third hour there was noticeable evidence that a number of people
were ready to leave (including me and my guest). Since by entrance agreement no exit is allowed
until the prescribed end, maybe a bit of script editing might be in order to
shorten slightly the overall evening.
The Speakeasy is
one of several ‘only in San Francisco’ events that we residents are so lucky to
be able to attend and to offer to take our out-of-town guests. The production is rich in the City’s history
– both fact and fictional – and is a theatrical gem to be treasured.
Rating: 4 E
The Speakeasy continues
in an open-ended run in a secret venue somewhere near Chinatown and North Beach
in San Francisco. Appointments can be
scheduled online for 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 5 p.m. Sundays at http://www.thespeakeasysf.com.
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