Hand to God
Robert Askins
Tyrone & Michael Doherty |
In a brightly hued room full of rainbows, craft materials,
and more than one happy Jesus, a friendly looking sock puppet pops out of a
small, make-shift, cardboard theatre and starts telling us his version of the
world’s beginning. This is not the
Genesis, seven-day version usually coming from a church puppet. This is an alternative, Cliffs Notes history about
how our stupid, and unshaven ancestors “rutted” about “careless in the night” and
started camping together (“that’s where the trouble started”). He tells us that “some asshole” invented
right and wrong and that “right is for all of us ... wrong ... just for
you”). The cute puppet also offhandedly
remarks that the same “motherfucker” who thought up “group kill also invented
the devil.” Before suddenly
disappearing, our wide-mouthed historian with his heart-shaped tongue leaves us
with a premonition of what is to come: “When I have acted badly, in order that
I may stay around the campfire, all I have to do is say ... the devil made me
do it.”
Welcome to Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s West Coast premiere
of what is turning out to be the most-produced play in the 2016-2017 theatrical
season across America: Robert Askin’s Hand
to God. Building on a Church
tradition that goes back hundreds of years and continues today, the playwright brings
to full life a puppet to be a witness of truth.
In this case, his revealed truths are increasingly full of blasphemy,
vulgarities, and all the secrets that those around him do not want anyone to
know – or even to admit to themselves. And
as the puppet blasts through his revelations, those within ear blasts
reluctantly face, fight, and finally in some cases stand up to their own demons
and the hurts, disappointments, and resulting loneliness their own plagues have
showered upon them.
Laura Odeh & David Kelley |
Margery is an attractive, middle-aged widow who is trying to
deal with the recent, sudden death of her husband and a sullen, too-distant
teenage son by volunteering at her church in an evening program where teens
make puppets for spreading the good news about Jesus. Her slightly older minister, Pastor Greg, both
wants the kids to perform for an upcoming service and Margery to return his
amorous suggestions (something she politely and repeatedly passes on). Besides her introverted son Jason, the other
two teen puppeteers are Jessica, a sweet but slightly nerdy girl with eyes for
Jason, and the class bully and too-mature-for-his-age, Timothy (who also comes
on strong to an intially repulsed Jessica).
Michael Doherty |
Jason has created what turns out to be his alter-ego self in
the form of a wide-eyed, green-sock puppet with orange locks (looking like a
distant cousin of Sesame Street’s Kermit the Frog) – a palm pal he is reluctant
ever to unhand. Michael Doherty is
astoundingly masterful in playing both the shy, seemingly innocent Jason and
the buddy on his hand, Tyrone, who soon transforms to a monster out of his
control. Their first real gig occurs on
the playground swings as he and Tyrone reenact for a fascinated Jessica a
hilarious “Who’s On First” routine, alternating split-second-timed quips in
similar voices with just a bit different intonations. But then Tyrone ridicules Jessica for not
knowing that Jason of course had not just made up this famous script. And as he starts telling Jessica that Jason
has the hots for her and “keeps touching himself in the dark” when he things of
her, Tyrone’s voice suddenly deepens and begin its journey to something more
threatening, evil, and, yes, devilish in its raspy tones.
Michael McIntire & Michael Doherty |
Tyrone takes on his satanic personality with ‘truth-telling’
outbursts full of expletives never meant for a church’s interior – doing so
especially when he is around those he (and Jason) see as truly demonic. The puppet loses no time going after Timothy,
whose cocky, irreverent, ruffian manners are played to the hilt by Michael
McIntire – along with teen sex drives clearly sent skyward by raging hormones
and by the presence of Jason’ mom, Margery.
Whenever Tyrone blasts into Timothy (and in time everyone else) with his
own expletive-filled insults, Michael Doherty’s Jason-half is quick in the next
second to be stunned, incredulous, and embarrassed with his own wide eyes, face
of horror, and meek, “I don’t know what’s going on.” As Tyrone develops sharp teeth and red-veined
eyes, the harm he is able to inflict becomes potentially physically as well as
verbally devastating. All the time, he also
wastes no opportunities to use his little pencil-thin, long arms to turn Jason’s
head to look him eye to eye in order to face realities about the son’s anger
toward his mom and his unrequited hurt in losing his father. Together as one, Jason and Tyrone are the
masterful results of exceptional acting by young Mr. Doherty.
Laura Odeh & Michael McIntire |
As Margery, Laura Odeh displays an incredibly wide range of
emotions with big personality twists and turns.
Her initial motherly twitters and teases with the kids and her
oh-so-polite turn-downs of the pastor’s come-ons provide little hint of the
raging vulgarities and venom to come, much less the eventual sensually crazed responses
to the teenager-turned-adult Timothy when he keeps advancing his sex drives on
her. Ms. Odeh’s performance is
shockingly funny while also stunningly painful.
That the playwright has created a character who stretches our
imagination to believe anyone would actually react in all the ways she does in
no way diminishes the power or impact Margery has on the play and its overall
message of facing one’s demons, accepting them, and moving on.
Michael Doherty & Carolina Sanchez |
Carolina Sanchez also transforms before our very eyes, moving
from the nice girl next door to a mover and shaker who is not about to let
Tyrone destroy the sweet Jason she likes.
When she dons her own buxom beauty of a puppet (think Miss Piggy) and sets
her up in a wild, sex-filled episode with Tyrone, not only does the ensuing
scene make the Avenue Q puppet sex
scene seem kindergarten in nature, the acting prowess of Ms. Sanchez (and once
again, of Mr. Doherty) shines as two completely different scenes occur
simultaneously, played by the same actors as both people and puppets. Nothing to be said but simply brilliant
writing, directing, and acting.
David Kelly is the awkwardly amorous preacher who tries to
offer Margery the “waiting arms of the church” for solace – all the time
clearly hoping she will leap into his one outspread arms (and eventually his
bed). There is oily sliminess spread
over the good pastor but also a somewhat genuine righteous desire to help that
gets tested to the fullest by all the devils rising around him in the church’s
basement. Mr. Kelly is perfectly suited
credibly to pull off all sides of the exasperated lover and horrified
minister.
Coming off 2015’s superbly directed “One Man, Two Gov’nors”
at the Rep, David Ivers returns to orchestrate another uproariously funny
production that opens the floodgates to pour out scenes that titillate, shock,
and totally satisfy. Not only has he
assembled a cast up to the task of his vision, his creative team could hardly
be better in their own performances.
First among these is scenic designer Jo Winiarski whose rotating walls
and scenes suddenly rising from below and emerging from the back depths are a
show unto themselves. (And there is some
wonderful tongue-in-cheek touches, too, like a certain clock’s stuck time
setting above the basement’s door.)
Much aid comes from the outstanding lighting design by
Alexander V. Nichols who helps highlight Tyrone’s threat of wickedness at just
the right moments. Meg Neville’s
costumes try their best to convince us of Margery’s wholesome goodness,
Timothy’s teenage but skin-deep bravado, and the Pastor’s aw-shucks exterior. And of course, Amanda’s Villalobos’s puppet
designs are key to the play’s total success.
At a time we all need to be shaken up to see the devils
among us (as if we were not already enough shaken by each day’s latest Tweets
and Facebook headlines), Berkeley Repertory’s production of Hand to God comes along. When all humans
have once again left him alone in the same puppet theatre where we first met
him, Tyrone alert us with his final words to be ready to find help from evil in
the places/people where we least expect to find it. Parting he says, “The thing about a savior is
you never know where to look. Might be
just the place you saw the devil before.”
Rating: 5 E
Hand to God continues
through March 19, 2017 on the Main Stage of Berkeley Repertory’s Peet’s
Theatre, 2015 Addison
Street, Berkeley, CA. Tickets are
available at http://www.berkeleyrep.org/
or by calling 510-647-2975 Tuesday – Sunday, noon – 7 p.m.
Photos
by Kevin Berne/Berkeley Repertory Theatre
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