Everything’s That’s
Beautiful
Elyzabeth Gregory Wilder
Mattea Fountain as Morgan |
Something happens unexpected, unplanned, unwanted. Change.
Immediately, the surrounding system is in transition – neither in the
state of what was once nor in the state of what might someday be. Emotions follow rollercoaster tracks. Communication falters. Hearing is difficult; listening is
impossible. Just when it begins to feel
better, it is not; and the cycle of mess and confusion starts again. And at some point, it becomes clear that
before the new can be accepted, the old must be grieved and let go.
In Elyzabeth Gregory Wilder’s new play, Everything’s That’s Beautiful, the system in flux is not a large
company in the midst of merger woes or a team of executives with a new
CEO. The system is a family of four, one
of whom is an eight-year-old boy, Morgan, who is ready to give up his action
figures and boy’s clothes for a sparkly dress and a swimming lesson with a
mermaid. And that means a family –
especially a father – must reach a point to say good-bye to a son no longer his
before he can fully embrace a new, beautiful daughter. The messy, confusing, unchartered journey of
a family who are all in transition as one member moves from male to female is
the focus of the world premiere of Everything’s
That’s Beautiful, now in a stunning, heart-touching, and thoroughly
captivating production by New Conservatory Theatre Center.
Transitions do not tend to come one at a time. They wait until a mob of changes join together
to slam through our door, invade our peaceful abode, and overwhelm us with
unwelcome surprises. For the Harris
Family, not only is former-boy Morgan now a cute, pixie girl, the family has
moved from a small, Midwest town to New York City to “start over” in a place
that might better accept her; both her parents (Luke and Jess) are in new jobs;
the family is now crammed into a meager apartment rather than in a big house;
and teenage brother Theo is just being how all teenagers are when parents make
stupid decisions that disrupt their lives.
William Giammona, Dana Zook & Mattea Fountain |
And as in any system where so many new balls are being
juggled at once, s—t happens. Dad does
not (yet again) show up with Mom for a weekly appointment with the family
therapist who is working with Morgan.
Electrician Dad in his temporary job as maintenance guy at a run-down
waterpark and school-teacher Mom in her summer gig as a waitress in a greasy
spoon both begin to have wondering eyes and lonely hearts. Son and brother Theo feels totally ignored
and cannot believe it is OK for Morgan to become a girl but he cannot pierce
his lip. Tension becomes heavier than
the air before a summer storm, and the inevitability of some unexpected
lightning strikes increases by the minute.
And through it all, Morgan just wants to learn how to float
in a pool like a mermaid so she can finally feel happy.
Director Ed Decker and his creative team have orchestrated
an idyllic, near- dreamlike atmosphere within which waves of this family’s ups
and downs occur. Gracefully carved curves,
walls, and formations provide the feeling of the sea in Devin Kasper’s
impressively attractive set where hidden, invisible pools, shores, and inlets
are able to emerge as the story calls upon them. Equally arresting in effect and beauty is the
inlaid lighting tracks; the shifting hues of azure, purple and emerald; and the
ripple shadows of water that are just a part of Virginia Herbert’s overall
lighting design. Sara Witsch provides soothing
sounds of the sea with their mesmerizing effects that counter the oft-stormy
clouds billowing in the family’s own skies.
The costumes and props of Jorge R. Hernandez accent the realities of
summer jobs, the quirkiness of a teenage son, and the fantasies of a little
girl. And the entire production moves at
a pace well conceived by its director with many touches to underline with
sensitivity and heart the human drama of change with its unexpected surprises
and its longed-for final acceptance.
Nick Moore & Mattea Fountain |
Among a cast who to a person is near perfect in their
portrayals, a first round of kudos must go to eleven-year-old Mattea Fountain. The maturity she brings to this difficult
part of gender transitions betrays her young age. The sheer joy that permeates her tiny stature
from head to toe when she first dons a dress or when she experiences an initial
floating in water is exhilarating to behold.
And during those moments when she seems to be the only adult in the
family, she leaves no doubt in our minds that this child brings some life-born
wisdom the others have yet to attain.
As Morgan’s mother Jess, Dana Zook exudes patience, empathy,
and concern that is a mother’s to show.
At the same time, the stress of all the shifts in her and her family’s
lives also is evident in her exhausted shoulders, rest-derived eyes, and a
voice that sometimes is half sigh-half cry.
Brother Theo (Nick Moore) is exactly the sometimes obnoxious, often
pissed-off, always hormone-exploding teenager that a fifteen-year-old should be
– with the adoring brother and sweet kid/son popping out unawares at just the
right moments.
It is in the role of the dad where the crux of this family’s
transition struggles is most mirrored.
As Luke, William Giammona is macho guy who is doing his best to be
sensitive – even if in an awkward, jerky manner at times. His own transformations are a hike through an
unchartered wilderness, with a couple of traps he too easily falls. He alternates between an ‘I’m cool ... I got
this’ attitude and a ‘I don’t think I can do this any longer’ collapse. When Luke blurts in the midst of emotional
upheaval, “I want her to be normal ... I want her to be the son I wanted to
have ... When I look at Morgan, I feel embarrassed,” Mr. Giammona makes us
shudder in a combination of pity, understanding, and disgust.
William Giammona & April Deutschle |
Sexy and friendly Gaby (April Deutschle) is the key trap
that Luke soon finds himself caught within.
As a Jill-of-all-trades at the water park, her main role is to star in a
mermaid show – a sight Morgan, Theo, and Luke all like to watch (for varying
reasons, of course). Ms. Deutschle is
tender and playful in portraying Gaby’s budding friendship with her new
swimming pupil, Morgan; and her Gaby finds that she is perhaps a bit too tender
and playful with her other new pal, Luke.
Tim Huls & Dana Zook |
Tim Huls appears in two different roles, each performed with
much credibility. As the family’s new
therapist, Dr. Miller, he shows the kind of empathetic compassion but also
subtle directness that any one would hope to find in a counselor. As Will, a guy hanging out reading obscure
books in the coffee shop where Jess is working, he keeps his eye on her as she
wipes down the counter, trying his best to hide a nascent and dimpled smile
that only get bigger once she notices him.
His Will is particularly fun to watch as he hems and haws and
practically dances a jig to engage Jess in some afternoon give-and-take
sharing.
For the most part, Ms. Wilder’s script works extremely well
illustrating the ripple effects that happen in any family when one member makes
a life-altering decision. That this
person is an eight-year-old boy making a decision most of us associate as one
even adults struggle a lifetime to make, if they ever do, is astounding and
altogether timely to behold. This script
does ask us to employ a degree of suspended disbelief to accept that similar temptations
are contemplated independently by both parents at the same time, especially
without being given many solid clues beforehand. But on the whole, the first outing for this
world premiere script holds up exceptionally well.
In one month, New Conservatory Theatre Center has opened two
world premieres (the other being the currently playing Leaving the Blues by Jewelle Gomez). Everything
That’s Beautiful is an important addition to the American stage and
deserves, even demands, to be seen nationwide for the lessons it can teach
about the unconditional love our children deserve, even as they turn out altogether
different than we thought and even hoped they would be.
Rating: 4 E
Everything That’s
Beautiful continues through April 23, 2017 on the Walker Stage of New
Conservatory Theatre, 25
Van Ness Avenue at Market Street, San Francisco. Tickets are available online at http://www.nctcsf.org or by calling the box office at
415-861-8972.
Photos
by Lois Tema
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