When We Were Young and
Unafraid
Sarah Treem
Zoë Foulks & Stacy Ross |
It’s 1972; and the U.S. Senate has finally followed the
House’s lead and passed the Equal Rights Amendment, sending it to state
legislatures with the hopes of millions of women that the constitutional
amendment first introduced in 1921 will soon finally become law. But not all women are totally on board with
the burgeoning women’s liberation movement.
In a captivating play that often seems more like a
page-turner novel, Sarah Treem places on an isolated island off the coast of
Seattle, Washington an entire range of opinions concerning women’s rights and
roles, from ultra-liberated to those bordering on totally traditional; and she
does so with only four females and one lone male. Custom Made Theatre Company presents her 2014
Off-Broadway When We Were Young and
Unafraid in a production that has the audience leaning in for the entire
two hours, careful to grasp every word, grin, and grimace of a cast that to a
person creates characters unique and memorable.
As they tell a slice-of-life story, hellacious pasts, remarkable
revelations and changes, and found redemptions all play a major part in the
telling.
The play opens with a scene familiar to almost any mother
with a teen-age daughter, with bed-and-breakfast owner Agnes trying to convince
her sixteen-year-old daughter Penny to ask a particular boy to the upcoming
high school prom, a suggestion to which replies the brainy kid in jeans who has
her sights more set on Yale than on dating boys, “I can’t think of anything
more bourgeois.” As the two continue to
have a typical parent/teen battle where no winner can possibly emerge, there comes
the sound of a gate click and a bell, with both looking at each other in a
knowing and urgent glance.
Stacy Ross & Liz Frederick |
From a trap door in the modest B&B’s kitchen (designed
meticulously by Bernadette Flynn with rustic touches from the 50s left over in
the 70s) emerges like a fragile butterfly from a cocoon Mary Ann – only this
butterfly is marked by a huge facial cut and wound eclipsing half her
face. Surprise Number One of the play (to
be followed by many more) is that Agnes secretly houses in her B&B desperate
women who are escaping their abusive husbands, something she hides from her
renting guests. With Mary Ann’s arrival,
both she and now fully cooperating Penny move into an evidently much-practiced
sequence to console and aid the wounded, scared, trembling victim.
As the next few days proceed, Mary Ann (only a few years
older than Penny) strikes up a friendship with the teen and interacts with her
in ways Agnes as the mother could never hope to do so. What emerges from Mary Ann -- who has clearly
suffered much at the hands of her drunken, soldier husband -- is a view of how
to win a boy’s attention that is counter to everything the liberation-leaning,
firebrand teenager Penny has thus far espoused to her skeptical mom. To her new friend, Penny now embarrassedly
but also excitedly confesses that she has had for some time her eyes on the
captain of the football team and would in fact love to go to the prom with
him. To that, Mary Ann rattles off a
Betty Crocker worthy recipe of how to win him over, emphasizing, “You want to
get the guy, you have to act like the girl ... Right now you are acting like
the guy.”
Stacy Ross & Renee Rogoff |
As they plot Penny’s newfound approach (resulting in jeans
and calculus book gone with short skirt, make-up, painted nails, and girly
flirting in replacement), into the household falls another lost soul, this time
in the form of a gruff, burly woman looking like she might spit on the floor
any minute. Hannah is looking for work
while also looking for a radically feminist group on the island called the
Gorgons. She immediately begins spouting
in loud, bombastic blasts that “feminism is the theory and lesbianism is the
practice.” She eyes Mary Ann with great
disdain and little initial sympathy while challenging Agnes to join “the great
battle that is coming.” “You need to
choose a side, Agnes ... We need to know, are you with us or against us.”
Matt Hammons & Liz Frederick |
Yet one more searcher for a different life lands on the
island’s shores as a paying guest at Agnes’ B&B, an escapee from the
hippy-infested San Francisco in the form of a squeaky clean, all-around nice
guy named Paul. The lanky, big smiling
man who still looks like a boy arrives wounded in ways not immediately obvious
and looking for someone for whom he can write a love song and sing while
strumming his guitar.
For each of these characters, back stories still to be
revealed will emerge, bringing revelations that lead to their and others’
changes and growth. Liz Frederick is a
frightened Mary Ann who has had a dream shattered while still holding on to the
fact she loves the man who destroyed that dream while hurting her. Her Mary Ann is an amalgam of conflicting
desires, confusing drives, and alternating timidity and boldness – providing us
a heart-breaking yet ultimately inspiring portrait of one abused woman among
the many Agnes has helped through the years.
Playing Penny, Zoë Foulks is absolutely convincing and
altogether believable as a girl who teeters between a excitable, quick-to-pout
girl and a young woman with beliefs firm and intentions idealistic. Matt Hammons has a little of Mr. Rogers and
some of Barney Fife wrapped into a persona of his Paul that comes close at
times to caricature but never crosses that line, leaving us with a guy who
exudes trustworthiness amidst a sea of women who eye him – at least in the
beginning -- with varying degrees of incredulity, disdain, and fascination.
Particularly strong in her portrayal of Hannah is Renee
Rogoff. Whether finding herself sitting
in the kitchen sink or on the floor with a screwdriver, her Hannah never ceases
to be several degrees past graceful and genteel. She moves with a proneness toward bowlegged swagger
and asks incessant questions with an approach much like a hammer. But her Hannah has a hiding heart the size of
the entire Northwest; and her search for someone with whom to share that heart
somehow leads her to return to this B&B, even if it is through the kitchen
window.
At the center of this story of highly diverse and diverting
personas is the overall reserved Agnes, underplayed with incredibly powerful
effects by a Bay Area favorite, Stacy Ross.
Her Agnes is full of subtleties that define her strong sense of
presence. Her upper lip barely lifts in
visible reaction to another’s comments.
Eyes often focus mostly downward when she speaks only to surprise with a
direct, upward glance. Her voice tends
rarely to modulate beyond monotone; but when it does, everyone notices. Emotions are controlled – until they are
not. In the final scene, Stacy Ross
leaves the audience limp and tearful watching her arresting collapse of all the
self-control and carefully managed emotions that we have come to expect.
The Set of When We Were Young and Unafraid |
Tracy Ward directs the Custom Made production with edge,
heart, and intuitive magic. She knows
how to elicit at just the right moments our laughter, curiosity, surprise (even
shock), outrage, sympathy, and admiration as she milks this brilliant script
for all this talented cast can give.
Along with Bernadette Flynn’s aforementioned scenic design, Stephanie
Dittbern’s memory-lane properties and Sound Designer Jerry Girand’s choice of
former 70s hit tunes (mostly women artists) establish the time period quite
well. Haley Miller’s well-placed
lighting decisions and Coeli Polansky’s costumes round out a wonderfully
executed production team whose combined work ensure the story is authentically
presented.
When We Were Young and
Unafraid is a story that ends on an ellipsis, not a period. We exit the theatre with a glimpse of where
each character is heading but also with questions for each that hang in the
air. There is another gate sound and a
bell just as the lights are about to come down for a final time. Abuse of women will unfortunately continue;
thankfully, people like Agnes will continue to be there to help. But one thing we know in the end of this
particular story, her life and the lives of the other four have been forever
altered by their joint association in the few days that we have shared with
them. Overall, we leave this outstanding
Custom Made Theatre production with the feeling the changes are ones that will
be somehow for the good.
Rating: 5 E
When We Were Young and
Unafraid continues through February 9, 2019 at Custom Made Theatre Company,
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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