peerless
Jiehae Park
L: You and then
M: You, that’s what we planned for.
M: Me and then
L: Me.
M: That’s why we came here.
L: That’s what it’s always been.
Tiffany Villarin & Rinabeth Apostol |
L & M: Identical twins.
The prettiest and smartest girls in their Midwestern high school. Of Asian descent. Perfect SAT scores. Perfect grades. Each stellar in all respects. Each a prime ... no, each THE prime candidate
for the historically one early decision spot that “The College” (you know, the
back East, Ivy League type with ivy, columns, brick and dripping with prestige)
awards each year to their high school. And,
a sister- sworn oath for L to hold back a year so M gets this year’s spot; and
L, next year’s.
That is until “the fat envelope” of acceptance from “The
College” drops from the sky into the hands of D, the nicest but dorkiest guy in
the class who just happens to be (gasp, how could he be?) one-sixteenth Native
American ... somehow out-stripping their 100% Asian-American (and female)
pedigree.
But that is all until the crazy, smelly (but clearly
prophetic) Dirty Girl says point-blankly to M that while she did not yet get into this year’s slot, “You will
... and your little dog, too.”
Thus sets up a high-school comedy hyper-hip in its
back-and-forth banter, its text-quick pace, and its locker-planned pacts and
plots – a comedy, that is, until it is not.
In writing peerless,
Jiehae Park has loosely structured her characters and progression of events
based on Shakespeare’s Macbeth. However, the more twists and turns that the
story takes as the twins seek to thwart anyone else getting that one crowning
seat on the admission list , the more the similarities become less “loose” and
instead become “tightly coupled” to the original story of Macbeth and his Lady
(Hint: “M” and “L”). Marin Theatre presents the West Coast premiere of Jiehae
Park’s peerless in a brilliantly conceived,
directed, and acted production that moves at whirlwind speeds through events
that move audience from leaning back in their seats in full laughter to moving
to the edge of their seats in tight-mouthed, tense anticipation of what will
happen next.
Rinabeth Apostol (“L”) and Tiffany Villarin (“M”) are
nothing short of astounding as they rattle off often at breakneck speeds
sisterly conversations where each picks up the past two-to-five words and
continues the thought, changes the subject, or inserts a surprise – only to be
quickly usurped by the immediate retort of her identical half. And mirror images they are in their preppy
outfits and hair-dos with the exception that L always dons or carries something
yellow, and M, something red.
L (think Lady Macbeth) is the scheming plotter and
relentless pusher who wants to ensure that the more reticent M increases her
own drive and boldness (sound familiar to wanna-be king you know?) as M more
and more believes the prophetic signs she is seeing that it is inevitable the
one admissions spot is hers/theirs. The
sisters never lose a minute of the play’s fast eighty to become ever more
determined to outsmart, undermine, and overcome anyone (everyone) who gets in
their way to ultimate success. The two
actors are shockingly good as they employ their entire beings in their initial
frenzy and fury, their later posturing and plotting, and their eventual dives
into final diabolism to secure admission. The Bard would be so proud.
Rosie Hallett & Tiffany Villarin |
Just as the Weird Sisters get a reluctant, unbelieving Macbeth
started down a no-exit path to fulfill at any cost his ever-gnawing ambition, Dirty
Girl does the same for M. Rosie Hallett
is that kid in school everyone knows but never talks to – the one in
dreadlocks, all black clothes with lots of holes, over-sized boots, and gross
smells from not having bathed in weeks.
She suddenly appears from nowhere, moves more on all-fours than upright,
and tends to scream nonsensical sounds between her growls and grunts. (Remember her from high school now?) Each time she shows up, she seems to offer
enough evidence of what is to come (e.g., how did she know M’s statistics test
score before M did?), leading M with wide-eyes to tell L, “There’s something she knows.” Rosie Hallett gleams from her darkened eyes a
knowledge that hints at evil doings and spits with a venom her next prediction,
all the while grinning a smile that could easily send shudders down most coeds’
necks – but no longer down M’s. Dirty
Girl is now her go-to, hallway seer.
Into the sister’s road to The College lands a possible
roadblock named D -- the nicest, most innocent, most trusting guy ever who is
nothing if he is not also the most gawky, embarrassingly loud, and goofiest
dresser in the school. This otherwise
average student just happens also to be one of thirteen left in his Native
American tribe – and the other twelve are senior citizens. And recall that D has already been the one picked
to go to The College.
Jeremy Kahn |
Jeremy Kahn pretty much steals the show in his spot-on
portrayal of the baggy pants, aw-shucks D (for those Shakespeare buffs, the
King Duncan of the cast), who can hardly shut up telling the twins how excited
he is that he and his cystic-fibrosis-suffering brother (also played by Mr.
Kahn) get to be their dates at the Hoopcoming dance. As he nervously shifts the weight of his tall
body with his long arms continually gyrating through the air while enthusiasm
exudes his every pore, there is little he does not reveal to the sisters. Without hesitation, he literally shouts with
glee to the now-listening sibs about his fatal allergy to tree nuts and the
EpiPen he always wears around his neck, ready to plunge its medicine quickly into
his thigh if a walnut touches his lips.
Maybe he should have listened to his mother who told him not to talk so
much.
Rounding out this excellent cast is Cameron Matthews who is
the studly, All-American (and also African-American) BF – ‘BF’ being his name
and his boyfriend relationship to M. He
too is vying for that one cherished spot at “The College,” unbeknownst to his
girl M. As his prototype-of-sorts Banquo
could tell him (if he were still alive), he might better think twice and just
keep eating the candy bars he is always munching and forget “The College” – as
well as his GF, M.
Rinabeth Apostol & Tiffany Villarin |
The lightning speed of much of the dialogue and the sudden
turns in events is enhanced by Kate Noll’s set design that sees scenes quickly
come and go behind three, garage-size doors.
The three inserts are like frames of a cartoon script. That feeling of a bizarre set of funnies is
further enhanced by the high in bright color and wild in shape and style
costumes that often are donned by the characters (especially the twins), all
designed by Sydney Gallas. (The twins in
their prom dresses of bright blue that reach only to their knees but are a
half-room in diameter, given all the petticoats under them, are such one
example of the designer’s tongue-in-cheek approach.)
Much of the looming mystery and portend of bad things to
come is accentuated by the inspired lighting design of Heather Basarab, whose
projected shadows often take on a life unto themselves in telling the story to
come based on the action now occurring.
Palmer Hefferan’s original, musical compositions provide a familiar
teenage pulse that also has a cutting-edge harshness to arouse suspicion that
all is not as it seems in these high school hallways. His sound design provides elements of
increasing creepiness that fit the storyline perfectly. All production elements and cast members are
directed by Margo Bordelon with a timing that is split-second and a bent toward
the uncanny.
In so many respects, Jiehae Park’s peerless in fact has no peers among current, live theatre offerings
– especially in the imaginative, inventive, and highly invigorating manner
presented by Marin Theatre where the boundaries between comedy and tragedy are
so vague for it to be a real mystery as to how to label the play. No matter because how I label peerless is as first-class, must-see
entertainment.
Rating: 5 E
peerless continues
through April 2 at Marin Theatre, at Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley
CA. Tickets are available online at http://www.marintheatre.org or by calling the box office
Tuesday – Sunday, 12 -5 p.m.
Photos
by Kevin Berne
No comments:
Post a Comment