The Eva Trilogy
Barbara Hammond
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Julia McNeal |
With ocean waves crashing somewhere in an unseen nearby and
invisible sea gulls noisily swooping overhead, she sits on the stage’s lone
brick doorstep. Forehead furrowed deep for someone only in midlife, cheeks
alternating between long and pooched but always with cheerful dimples, and red
hair giving away her Irish heritage almost as quickly as her delightful but
understandable brogue, she talks to no one in particular but maybe to us. Words tumble out continuously like a dripping
faucet that cannot be turned off, and her eyes glisten with excited almost
frenetic energy as she lectures to the gulls on subjects from Jesus’s thirst
for water while on the cross to the original woman with her own name and “the
business with the snake the and apple.” She also moves about her life from her
childhood to her first love-making with a kid named Jimmy. But throughout, the common thread of her
rambling is her returning to a long-ago memory or a moment’s ago experience
with her Mam, who lies inside dying of Parkinson’s.
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Julia McNeal |
For nearly an hour, Julia McNeal holds the audience in rapt,
almost breathless attention as she in nonstop monologue is Eva Malloy, a
daughter who escaped Ireland and family to live for years with little abandon
in Paris but who has returned to her home in Ireland to help care for Eileen,
her suffering mother. Eden is the first of three one-act plays
in Barbara Hammond’s The Eva Trilogy, now receiving its
world premiere at Magic Theatre. The
tour de force performance by Ms. McNeal in this one-woman first act is just a
taste of a fascinating three hours that are at times hypnotic, at times
startling, and at other times funny, touching, fanciful, and yes,
confusing. Each act can well stand alone
as its own story and play; but together the package is wondrous in its
exploration of the ravages and effects of personal loss and how to come to
peace with that loss.
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Lisa Anne Porter & Rod Gnapp |
While Eden takes
place at the very end of Eileen’s long journey toward death as narrated by her
daughter Eva, Enter the Road occurs
some time in the ensuing weeks or months as those close to Eileen share their
reflections and biases concerning enduring one’s own or another’s sustained
illness. More specifically, Eva’s sister
Teresa (Lisa Anne Porter), her husband Eamon (Rod Gnapp), Eileen’s hospice
caregiver Roisin (Amy Nowak), and the local parish priest Father O’Leary
(Justin Gillman) confront their own and each other’s views concerning the role
Eva had in relieving her mother’s suffering, in “helping her cross over.” Set in what is probably a courtroom during
the sentencing stage but with aspects of talk-show television studio, the four
approach stand-up mikes in somewhat random, non-associated manners – at times
appearing to be aware and to hear each other and at other times, seemingly
reflecting/debating in solitude. Time
and place also jumps around as each person speaks of what it was like to be
day-in and day-out with the sick and dying Eileen. All also give very pointed and/or poignant
views of Eva’s appearance from Paris to care for her mother while Teresa and
Eamon went away on a much-needed break. Their own conflicting views and the
differences among them are accentuated by the powerfully timed movements
orchestrated by Director Loretta Greco where their bodies pass and almost
collide and yet with each person appearing as if pacing on a stage alone in
thought and individual struggle of conscience.
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Rod Gnapp & Justin Gillman |
Each of the four leaves a memorable impression of the local,
small-town persona portrayed. There’s
the rather self-righteous, young priest who does not show much budge from
strict scripture interpretation whose judging, uptight, and fastidious manners
that Mr. Gillman provides him are seen in how he dresses without a wrinkle,
looks with disdain on opinions different from his, or holds himself erect as an
arrow. Rod Gnapp’s Eamon is a gosh-darn
nice guy who clearly loved and enjoyed his mother-in-law, suffered with her
suffering, and totally believes his sister-in-law knew how best to help her Mam
in her dying moments. His wife Teresa
teeters back-and-forth on how much sympathy she has or does not have for her
sister and how much agreement or antipathy she has for the accusing priest,
with Ms. Porter showing the exasperation of a woman who has lost one loved one
and is not sure whether she can bear to lose a second or not. Finally, as hospice nurse Rosin, Amy Novak
powerfully provides in words and pained but understanding expressions what it
is like to be with someone as death approaches and what a person like Eileen often
is dying (literally) to have happen as the end approaches. Together, the ensemble of four delivers a
captivating, thought-provoking The Roar.
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Caleb Cabrera & Julia McNeal |
Just as Shakespeare often does, playwright Barbara Hammond
takes Eva and a young, lost hiker named Tom in No Coast Road into the magical woods to find healing, resolution,
and peace-of-soul from losses both have experienced. Hana S. Kim provides both a set and
projection design that establishes a remote wilderness clearing amidst trees
and dancing nymphs (the latter whimsically portrayed in video by Megan
Trout). Combined with beautifully
scripted lighting effects of Stephen Strawbridge and subtle sound effects and a
low-humming musical composition both by David Van Tieghem, the third act is as
much dream as outdoor reality. Ms. Greco
directs the two-to-three-dozen, short scenes that remind one of a night’s
repose where dreams come and go as the body tosses and turns, finally falling
into the deep, desired sleep as the night’s sequence reaches a much-sought
resolution.
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Julia McNeal & Caleb Cabrera |
Eva returns in this third hour, now a much older woman -- a
forested hermit with wildly flying hair of white and various raggedy garments
covering her slumping, limping body (one now minus a leg). A beautiful specimen of a young man collapses
at her open-air homestead, lost on a hike that has a mission to become clear as
their special relationship develops.
Along with another stellar performance by Ms. McNeal as an Eva who is
still prone to spill forth non-stop her stories and observations, Caleb Cabrera
is outstanding as he slowly unlocks who Tom really is and what his mission in
this hike is. Together, they find in the
magic of this surreal setting answers and solace as well as rest of heart and
soul.
Not every minute of the three hours of Ms. Hammond’s The Eva Trilogy is always understandable
as to what is exactly happening and why, but never is there a minute that is
not intriguing. In the end, answers to
lingering questions are not always answered for us, but there is a sighing
sense of resolution that enduring a terrible loss (whether a loved one, one’s
freedom, or something as fundamental as one’s own leg) is possible given time,
help of a fellow human being, and maybe just a little magic.
Rating: 4 E
The Eva Trilogy continues
through November 12, 2017 at The Magic Theatre at Fort Mason Center, 2 Marina
Blvd., Building D, San Francisco.
Tickets are available at 415-441-8822 or online at www.magictheatre.org
Photos by Jennifer Reilly
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