Eureka Day
Jonathan Spector
The Cast of Eureka Day |
Maybe this is a typical, kindergarten classroom; but
probably most of those in America do not have posters hanging on their pristine
walls showing a raised fist for “Occupy Oakland,” a sad-faced elephant proclaiming
“Global Warming Is a Giant Problem,” or the definition of “eracism” (erasing
the belief one race is better than any other).
And for sure very few reside in high hills overlooking incredibly
stunning views of the far-off Golden Gate Bridge. After all, this is Berkeley; so we should not
be surprised that the board of the private Eureka Day School nibbles on
critically acclaimed, organic scones while agonizing on such meaty topics as
whether to add “trans-racial adoptee” to their already long list of racial and
ethnic categories for applying parents to use in designating their
children. And the fact the group “spits
balls” on topics (while most other groups just brainstorm) or ends its meetings
meditating on the just-read words of the thirteenth-century Persian Sunni poet,
Rumi, may not be too surprising either, given it is Berkeley.
But this group that prides itself in welcoming with open
arms the ideas of all as it reaches consensus on each and every decision is
about to undergo a 8.0 on the Richter Scale when one student (aka Patient Zero)
gets the mumps, leading to fifteen and growing the number infected. In a school where almost half of the parents
are proclaimed and practicing “anti-vaxxers,” the resulting rift of this
trembler is soon threatening to split the school apart – especially when the
local Health Department announces a quarantine of all those children not
vaccinated.
Aurora Theatre presents the world premiere of Jonathan
Spector’s Eureka Day, a highly
engaging, often hilarious, yet increasingly disturbing and thought-provoking
examination of what happens when highly intelligent, overall ultra-liberal, and
outwardly accepting-of-all people cannot agree on what some see as
well-established, scientific facts and others see as mega-biopharm
propaganda. In a time when our country
is so split between the right and the left with few remaining in the middle,
Aurora Theatre exposes an issue equally divisive and prone quickly to turn ugly
among those who probably all agree on 99.99% of all other issues.
For anyone who has ever been a member of any not-for-profit
board or committee, watching the five-person governing group of Eureka Day has
to bring back some nostalgic and maybe painful memories. However much members proclaim as does one member,
Suzanne, “I’m keeping my heart open to all of you,” the passions most wear on
their sleeves of the opinions and biases they hold tell the real story of their
well-intentioned openness.
Lisa Anne Porter & Rolf Saxon |
As Suzanne, Lisa Anne Porter speaks often in a voice shaking
in its intensity almost as much as her out-stretched fingers tremble to the
point they almost appear ready to eject from her hands. All the time, she keeps a tight-lipped smile
on her wild-eyed face as she defends the rights of those who do not believe in
vaccinating their kids. Under the
skillful direction of Josh Costello and the brilliant script of Jonathan
Spector, Suzanne is not someone we in the end can just dismiss – no matter our
own beliefs about vaccinations. Lisa
Anne Porter ensures we hear a tearful side we may not accept but one that
should be heard with compassion.
Charisse Loriaux, Lisa Anne Porter, Rolf Saxon & Elizabeth Carter |
Charisse Loriaux as the parent, Meiko, is also firm and
passionate in her own resolve, often nodding in agreement with the more
out-spoken Suzanne. However, her Meiko
shows her own firm sense of opinion and self, suddenly spitting out, “I find
the best way not to put words in someone’s mouth is not to put words in their
mouth” when she feels too many assumptions are being made about her feelings
and views. As the tensions mount with each
new, emergency meeting called, Meiko speaks louder and louder through her
focused, silent attention on knitting and her purposefully turned back to the
person speaking as if for her. As some
of us have seen in our own board meetings, the signs of an eventual eruption
are present in every one of Meiko’s sullen, quick glances over her turned
shoulders.
Teddy Spencer |
Eli is that board member who is so full of his own
enthusiasm that no matter how often he sincerely proclaims that he wants to
hear others, he cannot let five words from another person be said before
wildly, athletically interrupting, “Oh, oh, oh, but ...” In his stocking feet -- now in yoga position under
his torso on the kid’s work table and then supporting his ballet-like pose atop
the same table -- Eli’s arms flail and his flapping mouth rattles forth. Teddy Spencer is superb as the young wealthy
guy who is now a stay-at-home dad after making his high-tech millions – an
ex-CEO who still likes to take over with his own opinions that are about as
open as a closed door.
Elizabeth Carter |
Into this group enters Carina, a new board member who stands
out in this group not only with her stunningly beautiful curls and her more
reserved presentation of self but her skin color that is in dark contrast to
the others in the room. That Suzanne
immediately assumes Carina is here as a representative of those parents on
financial aid becomes a flashpoint for later meetings. In the meantime, Elizabeth Carter as Carina
largely observes with mixed looks of some disbelief and some amusement at the
group-process-on-steroids around her and the obvious mismatch of declarations
of openness and the set-in-concrete stands held. All the time, she is garnering her own
opinions for later impacts.
Rolf Saxon |
With hands often raised in front of himself as if in prayer,
school administrator and board member, Don, tries his sincerest best to
facilitate this gathered group, not only leading the aforementioned
“spit-balling” of ideas before “unpacking the list” generated and seeing “where
we’re landing right now,” but ensuring the members remember such norms as using
only non-gender-specific pronouns. Rolf
Saxon as Don is exuberant in his joy of being the one to lead the discussions,
acting as half cheerleader, half therapist as he gently generates such gems as
“Let’s focus on the positive of what we can do of what we can do.”
The Cast of Eureka Day |
When the board decides to open up their stuck-in-the-mud
deliberations (although they would of course never use such terms to describe
what is clearly an impasse) to the community of parents at-large, the
playwright and director combine creative forces to give us a Facebook Live
“Community Activated Conversation” that is both guffaw-producing humorous and
eye-popping terrifying. As Don et al are
seriously and sincerely trying to open up conversation about the local
government’s required quarantine, projected comments appear at an ever-furious
pace (with Facebook pics of those commenting and thumbs up, hearts, and
scowling frowns of those responding).
Initial gossip about who has moved where and why too soon turns into
insults and four-letter name-calling as those for and against vaccinations
fling their furiously typed quips. The
video design of Theodore Hulsker is fantastically real, as the split-second-perfect
direction of Josh Costello continues to prove its mettle.
As the foundations of this model school crumble, the scenic
design of Richard Olmsted, the lighting of Jeff Rowlings, and the sound of
Theodore Hulsker continually remind us that the hell this Board is going
through is taking place in a paradise of singing birds and a ever-gorgeous
array of setting-sun colors against the distant Golden Gate. And hats off to Lillian Myers as Prop
Designer for creating a classroom that any kid (and lots of adults) would love
to go spend a few hours perusing the shelves of kids books and games.
As a former organization consultant, I can attest to the
fallacy of any group believing consensus is always the end-all. That is especially true when the group
misinterprets and insists that consensus is the same as unanimity. Ensuring that everyone is heard and working
to a point that everyone can agree to support a decision upon leaving the board
room even if some do not agree is admirable and preferable. However in this adeptly acted and directed
world premiere of Eureka Day,
Jonathan Spector and Aurora Theatre help us to have that “Eureka,” ah-ha moment
of remembering that in fact there are always going to be winners and losers, no
matter how rosy we try to paint the picture with our well-intentioned
processes.
Rating: 4.5 E
Eureka Day
continues through May 13, 2018 on the main stage of at 2018 Addison Street, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at https://auroratheatre.org/ or by calling the box office at
510-843-4822.
Photo Credits: David
Allen
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