John
Annie Baker
Stacey Yen, Georgia Engel & Joe Paulik |
Silence speaks loudly and often in Annie Baker’s 2015 play, John – so often that without all the
periods of pause, the three-hour play might be half-to-two-thirds that
length. But it is those moments when the
characters are silently taking in what was just said, when someone is thinking
if and how to respond to another’s remark, or even when there is no one physically
at all in the parlor of the B&B that some of the richest segments of this
fascinating play occur. That is when we
as audience really notice the dozens of eyes watching us -- eyes from dolls of
all sorts scattered with seemingly hundreds of tchotchkes throughout the
Gettysburg, PA bed and breakfast. They
are watching with expressions that never change, making their judgments, and logging
their unsaid opinions – while at the same time the question keeps being raised
by the B&B host to her guests, “Do you ever feel watched?”
American Conservatory Theatre presents a thoroughly magical,
beautifully mystical, and sometimes heavenly mysterious production of Annie
Baker’s John, a play in which loneliness
does not always mean feeling totally alone.
Plot is not an important element of the play, but the movement of time
progresses the play’s momentum steadily forward such that there is never anything
close to a boring minute – even when nothing much is actually happening.
Like Chekov, Annie Baker forces us to pause and notice the
ballet of daily life, to stop and listen to the unsaid as well as the said, and
to admire the beauty of people’s spontaneous stories, sighs, and smiles. Humor emerges in ways most endearing. Pathos occurs in ways we might have otherwise
missed. Mirrors of our own dreams and
doubts, wonders and wishes, questions and propositions flash before us in a
play where time moves deliberately but at a pace where we have ample time to
notice and examine the players in its journey.
Georgia Engel, Joe Paulik & Stacey Yen |
Jenny and Elias have arrived at the Gettysburg bed and
breakfast seemingly to allow Civil War buff Elias to revel in the battlefields
and to awaken such interest in Jenny. It
soon becomes clear they may actually be here to see if there is a chance to
save their three-year relationship after some recent, rocky times. They are greeted into the history-laden house
-- once battlefield hospital where amputated parts rose higher than the window
– by perpetually cheerful, always gracious, and usually talkative Mertis -- the
seventy-something co-owner with her sick and never-seen husband, George. During their three days visit, they will also
meet Mertis’ best and older friend, Genevieve, now blind and with a sixth sense
about ghosts. Jenny and Elias will
confront new realizations about their future together. Stories of the scary and supernatural will
blend with recollections of madness and regret.
And, much effort will go into wondering what others are thinking when
they are actually no longer communicating.
Our eyes will watch all of this non-action unfold while we
are also watched as the non-rational bumps time and again into daily
reality.
Nothing short of delicious is the performance of well-known
Broadway and television star, Georgia Engel, as the B&B host Mertis who
gleefully serves chocolate tea, Viennese finger cookies, and perpetually genuine
smiles to her guests. Prone to say
phrases like “I’ll be dipped” when she is reacting to another’s story, Mertis
speaks with a unique voice so full of sweet melody that it is music that could
be listened to forever – no matter the current content of its libretto. A self-confirmed Neo-Platonist – a philosophy
emanating from the third century -- Mertis is clearly a believer in a “Watcher”
from which everything emanates. She
gently probes and intently listens to both Jenny and Elias as they expound on
their own experiences of feeling watched.
Ms. Engel literally twinkles in this role as she moves with much limping
effort across the stage and is the one who notes the passing of time by
forwarding the hands of a grandmother clock and thus initiating the eclipse or
dawning of light from the inn’s windows.
Stacey Yen |
When asked if she feels watched, Jenny immediately responds
that she worries about “objects,” particularly a doll like the one named
Samantha she is startled to see in Mertis’ parlor – the same doll she hated as
a child and haunts her memory to this day.
Stacey Yen’s Jenny often speaks in half-sad, half-far-off sighs. At other times, Jenny can be caught looking
into space or into directly into a speaker’s face with a mouth open as if about
to speak but does not. There is
something vulnerable, hidden, nervous, and scared about Ms. Yen’s Jenny. She is an enigma only time’s passing will
reveal some of the clues as to why.
Joe Paulik & Georgia Engel |
The bearded Elias tends to be pensive with knitted brow behind
his thick, black glasses but quickly can animate when topics of history, bowls
of corn flakes, or an opportunity to create a ghost story enter his world. He has questions and uncertainties about his
relationship with Jenny and even asks hypothetically to Mertis, “Have you ever
wondered whether to go or stay ... and wanted God to come down and tell
you?” Joe Paulik evokes from deep inside
his being statuesque silence of contemplation, boy-like excitement of new
discovery, and startling outbursts of bent-up frustration and anger – all the
time proving his as a talented actor.
Ann McDonough, Joe Paulik & Georgia Engel |
Rounding out this exceptionally-cast ensemble is Ann
McDonough as Genevieve Marduk, often steel-faced behind the dark glasses hiding
her unseeing eyes but clearly always aware of the more eerie nuances of the
inn’s atmosphere and the bottom-line meanings behind the conversations therein. While she can sense the presence of unknown
specters, she elaborates on her own journey to exorcise the very real influence
of a past husband’s controlling reign on her crazed life – including a surprise
breaking of the fourth wall to do so while engaging directly with us as
audience. Guided by Ms. McDonough’s
skills, Genevieve’s presence is a fantastic mixture of severe, silly, and
spooky – just the perfect combination for this intriguing sojourn through time
in the B&B.
Starring also in John is a set design that appears as if Marsha Ginsberg (scenic
designer) and Jacquelyn Scott (props master) literally picked up an authentic
B&B from the Pennsylvania countryside and magically transferred it to ACT’s
Strand stage. Hundreds of details
meticulously combine to create this homey set where a tour would be a
wonderful, post-play offering. Shelves
are sagging with collectables; a magnificent Christmas tree shelters an entire
village; pictures, books, lamps are asking for closer observation; and then
there are all those dolls. The
authenticity is further enhanced by a lighting design (Robert Hand) and a sound
design (Brendan Aanes) that assure us that a car has actually driven up in
front of the house, that the sun has risen and is now making its path across
the blustery winter sky, and that the creaks and moans of the old house occur
quite naturally and at will.
And then there are all those important pauses -- those
moments of silence that sometimes feel so peaceful they could last forever. That they are then interrupted by
conversations that feel unscripted with their uhs, stumbles, and unintended
repeats any of us would naturally have is familiar and comforting. Those and all the exquisitely orchestrated daily
interactions and actions of host and guests are directed with artistry by Ken
Rus Schmoll, who clearly understands Annie Baker and her unique approach as a
playwright.
Ken Rus Schmoll also knows how to direct the unseen
characters – a sick husband George, a despised ex-husband Jack, and a recent
lover named John – all of whom play their own important roles in the lives and
times of these four people. Playwright,
director, cast, and creative team combine forces to ensure this slice-of-life
recounting in American Conservatory Theatre’s production of Annie Baker’s John is mesmerizing and memorable.
Rating: 5 E
John continues
through April 23, 2017 at the Strand Theatre of American Conservatory Theatre,
1127 Market Street. Tickets are
available online at http://www.act-sf.org
or by calling the box office at 415 749-2228.
Photos by Kevin Berne.
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