The House of Yes
Wendy MacLeod
Casey Robbins & Caitlin Evenson |
Lightning flashes; winds howl; and the rains pound the
multi-paned windows. But the approaching
hurricane’s fury cannot begin to compare to the maelstrom that is brewing in The House of Yes, Wendy MacLeod’s 1990
play that is a modern version of a Jacobean tragi-comedy. Like its 400-year-old predecessors, The House of Yes is full of subjects
taboo in nature and often kept locked away in closets or basements in most
households – subjects like insanity, secret affairs, incest, and revenge. But in Wendy MacLeod’s House in its latest reincarnation at Custom Made Theatre, the
upper-class, Washington, D.C., suburban abode is also home to biting satire with
its rooms brimming in dark, delicious comedy and peopled by a brilliant,
quirky, and equally delicious cast.
Blowing into the Pascal household is son Marty from New York
City, twin to Jackie-O, brother (or maybe half-brother, no one is sure) to
Anthony, and son to Mrs. Pascal, whose assessment of her grown kids is, “I look
at you people and wonder how you ever fit into my womb.” Prodigal Marty has not come home alone; and
his surprise of a fiancé named Lesley -- a Donut King waitress (“She smells
like powdered sugar”) – sends the entire household into stormy flashes of
subversive plots. In the meantime, there
is Thanksgiving dinner to prepare (“I am going to baste the turkey and hide the
sharp objects”); games to play (anyone up for recreating the Kennedy
assassination?); and new skills to learn about hosting (“We’ve never really had
over a guest before”). This is a family
whose closeness may make it a little difficult for the clan’s potential
newcomer to find her way, especially when Mrs. Pascal’s opening remarks to
Lesley are, “I just know Jackie-O and Marty belong together ... Jackie was
holding Marty’s penis when they came out of the womb.”
With a set-up like that, how can this Thanksgiving not be
special and unforgettable? After all,
there are secrets galore to unhinge from the family’s Pandora Bo; there are
plot twists that will soon twirl faster than an approaching tornado; and there
is romance in the air, under the covers, and on the couch – but not the kind
most often associated with family, holiday gatherings. And why, oh why does Lesley not listen to
Marty’s plea five minutes after their arrival?
“You’ve met them; they’ve met you ... Let’s go.”
Shelley Lynn Johnson & Juliana Lustenader |
Heading this household (or not) is Mrs. Pascal, dressed for
Thanksgiving dinner in her blue, designer dress with matching jewelry and usually
with martini in hand. Shelley Lynn
Johnson is clearly having a hoot playing this wonderful role of a mother who
takes little responsibility for her children’s present states (“People raise
cattle; children just happen”) and who often has a quick ‘truth’ to impart that
can hilariously put a halt to ‘normal’ family activities. “Conversations only get you into trouble ...
Take it from someone who knows,” she declares heading off in a huff to bed when
it is suggested the family could sit around and visit awhile with each
other. Ms. Johnson is a fabulous mixture
of the grand dame and the wicked queen.
She delivers her mostly short, declarative retorts with both an air of
dismissal of all those around her and of a foreboding that her will will be done in the end.
Elliot Lieberman & Juliana Lustenader |
Into this family where ties, loyalties, and affections are
tangled in knots not very likely to be loosened comes Lesley. Juliana Lustenader is a Lesley who is not-too-smart
but soon smart-enough and who brings a sunny, optimistic innocence just asking
to be chewed up and spit out for fun by this family engrossed in its
insularity. That is, by all but Anthony,
the twins’ younger twenty-three-year old brother (conveniently the same age as
Lesley) who immediately has eyes and designs on his brother’s to-be. Elliot Lieberman time and again comes close
to stealing the show with those same eyes that seem to grow to the size of
half-dollar coins – two, huge whites encircling dark pupils that dart from side
to side emitting vivid conversations as loud as the words Anthony himself might
or might not be speaking at the time.
His puppy love for Lesley is that of a dog in heat with few boundaries
and is one his mother is only happy to aid and abet from the shadows.
Casey Robbins is wonderfully Janus-faced as he portrays Marty. There is the lovey-dovey betrothed to his
oh-so-perfect Lesley who assures her (with a straight face and a slightly crooked
smile) that the family members all really do adore her. Then there is the twin brother who makes
quick, devilish side-glances to his sister -- their two sets of eyes locked in
a plan brewing for later, clearly remembering something from before. Mr. Robbins’ Marty remembers how to play
games that only he and his sister know the rules; and he is eerily, creepily,
and dangerously good in his recall.
But no one can come close to Jackie O for being eerie,
creepy, and yes, dangerous while at the same time being totally bizarre,
fascinating, and hilarious. Caitlin
Evenson uses her slightly upturned and unmoving smile, her high cheeks, and her
piercing eyes both to send chills down our necks and laughs into our
bellies. Jackie O is obsessed with
assassinations and soap operas and is living her pill-filled life (“blue ... to
match my eyes”) with both in mind. Her
recent return from a psychiatric hospital does not mean she may not burst any
moment into an inflamed rage over the slightest surprise (Hint: Do not hide her
hair brush or tell her there is no more ice). Ms. Evenson is uncanny in her
bouts of madness and then instant returns to calm – all the time clearly
plotting how to rid Marty of Lesley and keep him home forever for herself.
This House of Yes is
where family members have never learned to say no to each other no matter how
outrageous the request. Stuart Bousel
delectably directs with both tongue-in-cheek and sinister-eye-ready-to-shock. Scenes end and begin with surprises that draw
both gasps and laughs – and often both at the same time. Over-the-top is never allowed to be
over-done. The pace of the ninety minutes has scattered minutes of family
frenzy punctuated by searing seconds of freeze-framed glares and glimpses –
both of which the director has ensured parallel the growing intensity of the
outside storm.
Zoe Rosenfeld’s set design beautifully reflects the muted grays
and ivories and the molded ceiling borders of upper-class distinction one might
expect from a home around the corner from the Kennedy’s MacLean, Virginia
estate in the mid 1980s. The outside
hurricane and its indoor effects become immediately and convincingly real
through the expertise of Sophia Craven’s lighting design and Ryan Lee Short’s
sound design. Kathleen Qiu dresses the would-be
aristocrats of suburbia in evening finery for Thanksgiving and brings Jackie
O’s Dallas-based fantasies about November 22, 1963 to full life with effects
full of farce and fun (and some intended shock).
Acclaimed English film and stage director, Declan Donnelan,
says, “Every so often it’s important to empty our prisons and see who we’ve got
locked up there ... Even if it’s just the prisons of our imagination.” Custom
Made Theatre invites us all to look into our own hidden cells of secrets and
sins as we both laugh and cringe while entering Wendy MacLeod’s The House of Yes.
Rating: 5 E
The House of Yes
continues through April 29, 2017 at Custom Made Theatre Company at 533 Sutter
Street, San Francisco. Tickets are
available online at www.custommade.org
or by calling 415-789-2682 (CMTC).
Photo Credits: Jay Yamada
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