Warplay
JC Lee
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| JC Sclazo & Ed Berkeley |
How inevitable is it that most boys will play war when they
are kids, that plastic helmets and swords will be badges of honor to wear, and
that lifelong bonds will often form with other guys as they tumble on the
fields of backyard battle? And how
likely is it that those same boys will grow to be men and go to war where the
boundary between game and reality, fun times and horrific events, life and
death becomes porous and confusing?
Human history says to-date the inevitability is still
incredibly high that the lifetime march of boys and men toward war continues, resulting
in the deaths of bosom comrades. New
Conservatory Theatre Center presents its third world premiere of the 2016-2017
season, staging JC Lee’s Warplay, a
new work whose very title asks us to contemplate when, how, and maybe why a
boy’s playtime games seem fated to become a man’s demise. JC Lee also adds the complication of what
happens when Fate dictates that a boyhood bond develops into a manhood relationship
where love for another and duty to country conflict.
Based on the events of the Trojan War as told in Homer’s Illiad, JC
Lee’s Warplay focuses on two key
players, Achilles and Patroclus, renaming them simple ‘A’ and ‘P’ and making
them contemporary in their modern speech and references. In the background, far-off sounds of modern
artillery occasionally punctuate their jockeying dialogues – verbal
back-and-forths that often sound like two teenagers bragging and teasing their
best bro. As the war sounds get
menacingly closer under the stars of night, a common returning theme between
the two is when will ‘A’ head back to the battle and why can’t ‘P’ come
along.
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| Ed Berkeley & JD Sclazo |
‘A’ tries to prepare ‘P’ for what he increasingly knows is
Fate’s path for ‘P’ – no matter how much ‘A’ tries to intervene to halt that
inevitability. ‘A’ clearly acknowledges
his heavenly deemed role as “hero” of his own life’s story and that “I’ve spent
my whole life preparing for this [i.e., the war at hand].” He is uncomfortable and even irritated that
‘P’ sees himself as just a small sapling in the forest next to ‘A’s’ bigger
tree rising high into the sunlight. But war,
time, and Fate march on; and there is a sense of finality and fatality in each
young warrior’s whispered “I love you” to the sleeping other – something they
seem reluctant to say aloud in the bright of day.
With an eye both toward boyish playfulness and pranks as
well as toward adult passions of war and love, Ben Randle directs this world
premiere in a manner leaning toward the poetic.
Metaphors that abound in script are allowed to emerge naturally in the
conversations and actions (as well as set design); and like a poem, some of the
individual lines and symbols are not readily understood immediately but work
collectively and in the end to paint a moving, lyrical picture.
One prime example is a recurring image of rabbits. Watching the play, the increasing
predominance of cuddly rabbits – bunnies that more often than not meet an
unhappy ending -- is curious and frankly puzzling with no answer emerging as to
why a rabbit. The metaphor becomes much
clearer in a post-theatre, Google search when one discovers that the Achilles
heel of a rabbit and of a human are structurally close enough that medical
researchers use the former to study how to heal injuries human’s incur in their
Achilles. When one pieces together what
we know through Homer of Achilles’ own fatal flaw and how his time on earth is
tied to the vulnerability of his heel, then the startled fear that ‘A’ shows
each time a rabbit suddenly appears with a message and the anger that erupts as
he kills yet another rabbit become important underlying threads in the
play. (Unfortunately, there is no
dramaturgy provided in the program to help the audience understand this rather
obscure, but important reference.)
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| Ed Berkeley |
Both actors in Warplay
are exceptional in conveying the unique personalities of their epic-based
predecessors. As ‘A’(chilles), Ed
Berkeley takes his status of gods-given hero rather matter-of-factly, often conversing
at an almost ho-hum level in succinct fashion.
The river runs deep within him as can be seen in those big, intensely
earnest eyes that belie the shoulder shrugs, slight smirks, and overall
demeanor smacking on boredom that contrasts greatly to the over-active,
high-strung ‘P.’ But when it comes to
his feelings toward ‘P, he leaves no doubt that those are anything but casual –
even if they are not expressed in words directly to the man he clearly loves.
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| JD Sclazo & Ed Berkeley |
‘P’(atroclus) is a wound-up ball of nervous energy –
skittish in an ADHD mode much of the time.
The arms and legs of JD Sclazo cross and uncross as often as seconds
ticking on a clock, usually at the same time his body is swaying or he is
walking in circles around the more stabilized, silently watching (with slight
smile showing) ‘A.’ His lightening bug
movements mirror the frustration he voices to ‘A’ that “I’m not special” and
the realization that “I don’t register except as your diversion.” His drive to be somebody only makes ‘A’ increasingly
tense and worried as he tells ‘P,’ “Quit trying to prove yourself ... Just be
who you are.” The bold belief more
likely retained from boyhood that nothing can really harm me is evident in Mr.
Sclazo’s portrayal of ‘P.’ But the deeply knitted furrows in ‘A’s’ forehead
indicate that he knows more than he wants to admit about P’s future, with Fate having
already marked his and ‘P’s forward trail.
The interplay of boys playing and men warring is seen
throughout the set so well designed by Devin Kasper. The black sands of a war-torn landscape butt
up against a bombed-out wall covered with military tarp and are dotted with the
toys of a kid’s backyard. A ladder
leading up to a tented door could be a boy’s homemade tree house or a soldier’s
improvised shelter.
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| Ed Berkeley & JD Scalzo |
The lighting design of Christian V. Mejia casts shadows and
shapes that sometimes remind one of boys playing games and other times, of
nature’s portending possible doom. The
sound design of Theodore J.H. Hulsker carries its own warnings in both the
far-off explosions of war or in the choice of music that surrounds the small
arena. Miriam Lewis’s costumes and
Adeline Smith’s properties never let us forget these are boys in men’s bodies,
kids facing adult decisions and consequences.
JC Lee’s script is indeed poetic and powerful, even if
certain references are a bit unclear (like all the rabbits). Unfortunately, in my opinion, the play is too
short for a main-staged production. At
barely seventy minutes, the play lasts less than the time many of us living in
the ‘burbs of San Francisco Bay Area took to get to the City to see it, much
less to go home. I personally find such
short offerings a bit frustrating, even when they are overall quite good.
That said, the acting, directing, and creative team choices
of NCTC’s Warplay are all note-worthy
and admirable. As a world premiere
production, there is much to ponder and to admire.
Rating: 3.5 E
Warplay continues
through July 2, 2017 on the Walker
Stage of The New Conservatory Theatre Center, 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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