All the Shah’s Men
Matthew Spangler
Ken Boswell, Christian Haines & Annamarie MacLeod |
If one wanted to find out the origins of today’s deeply
divided and dangerous issues between the U.S. and Iran, there is probably some
semester-long, poli-sci course a local community college is offering on the
subject or a number of detailed books that could be read, including a 2003 book
by New York Times correspondent, Stephen
Kinzer. Or, there is the alternative of
seeing all the incredible, quite unbelievable events unfold before one’s eyes
as that same book, All the Shah’s Men,
is translated into a mind-blowing, true tale of spies, subterfuge, and sabotage
in Matthew Spangler’s play by the same name, now in world premiere by the
Arabian Shakespeare Festival. Vicki
Rozell directs a production at the tiny Royce Gallery that has all the
suspenseful intrigue, white-knuckled pace, and plethora of known and
never-heard-of characters one might expect to find on a big screen, Hollywood production
– all accomplished with a talented, multi-faceted cast of five in a space
barely the size of a small living room.
There was actually a time in the early 1950s when Iranians
and their democratically elected Prime Minister, Mohammed Mossadegh, admired
the U.S. The press in the U.S. and
around the world in return poured praise onto the Iranian leader (named Time’s 1951 “Person of the Year”) as he
made a case at the United Nations against Great Britain’s attempt to block
Iran’s nationalizing its own oil supply -- a treasure the British had developed
to the point of pulling in 84% of the oil revenues, with only 16% going to a
very poor Iran.
While the world applauded the small country’s stand against
the British Empire, the U.S. and its new conservative president, Dwight
Eisenhower, were not about to stay neutral (except in the public eye). Instead,
they decided to utilize the relatively new Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to
partner with Britain’s covert agency, MI6, to create a coup d’état to overthrow
the legitimate, Iranian government for one to be run by their hand-selected,
General Zahedi, arrested by the British during WWII as a supporter of the
German Nazis. That move was to be a
first step to make way for Mohammed Reza Shah eventually to take over Iran – a
leader that the U.S. and Britain believed could be more in their control than
Mossadegh and who would allow them jointly to control the oil supply.
Christian Haines & Farshad Farahat |
It is the complicated, incredulous set of events occurring in
just a matter of days in August 1953 that All
the Shah’s Men lays out in a play that often feels like an hour-by-hour,
even minute-by-minute accounting of the takeover. After setting up a few major lead-up events
in 1951 and ’52 (including the appearance of the legitimate Prime Minister
before the U.N.), Matthew Spangler leads us through the plans and tactics of one
spy – the grandson of Teddy Roosevelt named Kermit – ones that often sound as
if coming from DC Action comic book. Events
recounted on the stage seem time and again to be too crazy to be true but have
been included by the playwright as gleaned from the history books: Roosevelt
meeting under a blanket in a taxi with the Shah; Eisenhower and the BBC
including certain, publicized phrases on air in order to persuade the Shah to
go along with the coup; code names like “Operation Boot” and “Operation Ajax”
(the latter purposely named after the toilet cleanser).
Christian Haines as Kermit Roosevelt is eerily an everyday
looking-and-acting person one might meet on the street and never even notice or
to talk at a party and soon forget. He
likes his Vodka; he plays Cribbage to win; and he likes listening to “Luck Be a
Lady Tonight” from Guys and Dolls. But as a CIA operative in an adolescent spy agency
still making up its own rules, Mr. Haines’ Kermit (code name Jim, undercover as
a Canadian oil man) shows the capacity to transform into a diabolically intense,
near maniac, willing to throw large amounts of cash to buy rioting crowds to go
to the streets to bomb stores and mosques in order to set up the kind of chaos
for a quick changeover of government.
William J. Brown III & Christian Haynes |
Mr. Haines never allows his Kermit to flinch at the idea
that what he is doing is unethical, anti-democratic, and totally
un-American. His logic becomes the same
that will be used time and again in Central America and the Asia Pacific in the
years to come: Stop the Soviets and Communism at all cost -- even in this case
when the threat is one he and the CIA mostly make us and then actually start to
believe. Christian Haines is superb to
the point of sending shudders down one’s spine as he orchestrates chaos --
sometimes with cool and collective smoothness as he advocates in straight-face
“build democracy through a coup” and sometimes with eyes glazed with dire
determination as he angrily spits out lies that he wants put in the money-hungry
press as truth.
The other four members of the cast each play multiple, often
extremely varied parts in order to populate the story with its many players –
most based on real-life people. Among
other roles, William J. Brown III is Kermit’s State Department contact and
sometimes partner, Roger, who vacillates widely in his reactions to what Kermit
is planning. While he has the look of
disgusted shock when he says, “This whole thing is wrong,” his Roger is also
one who can become almost like a kid in his ecstatic excitement in a “we did
it” state of joy when the coup appears to succeed.
Ken Boswell is Robin Cochran, a fictional British
imperialist and MI6 agent who has no love for the Iranians, and is Walter
Smith, a real CIA agent who implants in Roosevelt’s mind the idea of using
“stop Communism in its tracks” as the reasoning for the coup. Mr. Boswell is also Loy Henderson, Ambassador
to Iran during the early 1950s, who with gentle and trusting voice and
empathetic eyes both makes false promises and declares outright lies to the
legitimate ruler of Iran, who believes in their long-term friendship.
Annamarie MacLeod is Anne Lambton, a MI6 operative, who
often serves as the stern-faced, take-no-prisoners narrator of the story. She is also a very social, well-dressed
Canadian diplomat -- a fictional Kate Bentley -- who works out of the Turkish
embassy (since Canada does not have its own); who clearly has eyes on the
Canadian oil guy, Jim (code name for Kermit Roosevelt); and who has a secret of
her own that will add a further twist of mystery and intrigue to this story.
Fashad Farahat & Ken Boswell |
The evening’s starring award, however, must go to Farshad
Farahat who takes on the most diverse set of roles of all. As the aging and ailing legitimate ruler, Mohammed
Mossadegh, Mr. Farahat is bent over, shaking slightly, and holding onto a cane
that is the difference between his barely standing and his collapsing. His Prime Minister Mossadegh speaks with a quietly
spoken passion but one full of fire backed by facts that could surely have
swayed a listening, world audience.
As Mustapha (code name, Bosco, as in the chocolate milk
mix), Mr. Farahat is the proud, bold, and steely eyed right-hand assistant of
Kermit Roosevelt – the Iranian insider who uses the ready made stacks of CIA cash
to produce mobs full of instant anger and destruction and to buy the press with
any story manufactured. He can look
Kermit in the eye and tell him in no uncertain terms just why he is helping him
with a reason that has implications to this day. Farshad Farahat is equally impressive as the historically
real players, the society boy Shah (who rather likes his code name, Boy Scout)
and the black-cloaked, dripping-in-evil, General Zahedi.
The number of characters involved, the number of often
surreal events and turns-of-events, and the many ongoing implications evident
to our present day situation could easily make this less-than-two-hour play
overwhelming and confusing. But such is
not the case for the script created by Matthew Spangler and as directed by Vickie
Rozell. There are a few extremely short
scenes among the twenty-plus that probably could be edited out of existence without
losing much; but that is to be expected in a world premiere. Overall, this fine production of All the Shah’s Men by the Arabian
Shakespeare Festival is an A+ first-outing and one that hopefully will have
legs for further productions – including those for students in high schools and
colleges studying how recent events of their grandparents’ life times have shaped
the dilemmas that they are inheriting to solve in the future.
Rating: 4 E
All the Shah’s Men continues
through May 20, 2018 by the Arabian Shakespeare Festival at the Royce Gallery,
2901 Mariposa Street, San Francisco.
Tickets are available online at www.arabianshakes.org
or by calling 408-499-0017.
Photo Credits: Gregg Le Blanc
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