Late Company
Jordan Tannahill
Baela Tinsley, Cheryl Smity, Desiree Tinsley, Lawrence Radecker & Kenneth Heaton |
The announced menu for the dinner party includes a main
course of healing and reconciliation; but as the meal progresses, the dessert
begins to look like a food fight full of accusations peppered by cradled
secrets, unspoken fears, simmering doubts, and hidden agenda. It is a year after one couple’s only teenage
son has committed suicide by slitting his wrists in the tub. They have now invited for dinner the parents
of the boy who participated in harassing at school and on YouTube their gay son
along with the admitted perpetrator himself.
While intentions up front appear genuine on all parts to clear the air
and build a bridge toward healing, the recipes chosen for the evening do not
turn out as planned. New Conservatory
Theatre Center presents Canadian Jordan Tannahill’s 2013 Late Company -- excruciatingly
painful to witness but powerfully impacting to see.
What becomes clear early on is that there is no agreed-to,
consensual outcome for this at-best awkward and uneasy gathering. Try as all do in the initial introductions
and stilted chitchat, what is going to happen when there is finally a call to
“Let’s just start” appears to be unclear.
Hosting Michael even tries to release himself from owning much
responsibility for what will happened as he says upfront, “Debora put a lot of
thought into this ... I just did the appetizers.” The visiting Dermots nervously comment about
Debora’s hung artwork and ask about Michael’s work as a conservative
politician, with a game of approach/avoidance ensuing of when, what, how (and
maybe even why) in regard to the planned main course of conversation.
At the table meticulously, formally set for the evening, six
places have been reserved – five for hosting Debora (Desiree Rogers) and
Michael (Lawrence Radecker) and the late-arriving Dermot family of three and
one more place-setting for Joel, the son for whom the hosts still mourn
daily. Though dead already a year, Joel
is very much present during the entire evening to come, particularly when his
parents unpack with detail a box full of his awards and mementos along with
Debora’s five favorite photos of him.
Tamara (Cheryl Smith) and Bill (Kenneth Heaton) Dermot dutifully, even
sympathetically smile, nod, and listen to the tearful presentations while
occasionally glancing at each other with a look of question. Their son Curtis (Baela Tinsley) looks
straight ahead with face tense and eyes frozen somewhere in the far distance,
moving only in occasional twitches that seem more involuntary than not.
Cheryl Smith, Desiree Rogers, Lawrence Radecker & Kenneth Heaton |
As the conversation focuses increasingly on both Joel and on
Curtis’ role in bullying Joel suffered at school (everything from frequent
cat-calls to human excrement smeared on his locker), more and more revelations
rise to the surface that often surprise more than one person at the table. The Dermots learn that Joel’s parents had
made several trips to the school’s administration about other kids’ cruel treatment
of Joel and had been promised that all parents of the accused would be
contacted -- something that had never occurred for them as Curtis’ parents. Michael and Debora learn of questionable
videos Joel had himself made (including one making a serious threat to other
named students) and which had been widely viewed by students, teachers, and
evidently many parents – but not by them (or so both at first say). The skins of the onion begin to come off at a
speed shocking to everyone present as new information or incident that someone
(a parent, Curtis, a teacher/principal, Joel himself) knew but had not informed
others who should have known.
Cheryl Smith & Desiree Rogers |
Differences of opinion also become ever sharper and snappier
-- between the two families and especially between spouses. When Debora asserts her son was not that gay,
husband Michael shoots back, “He was as gay as Mother’s Day.” Pointed implications shoot across the table
about the other couple’s family and parental practices. Temporary bonds of empathy and understanding
are formed across family lines – most noticeably by the mothers -- only to be
severely, dramatically severed within a few minutes after a new revelation or
accusation.
What becomes achingly clear is that the horrible outcome of
a suicide, especially that of a child, is due to a complex set of
variables. While the bullying by peers
may have been in this case the icing on the cake, many ingredients had been
added by a host of people, institutions, and norms/practices to aid and
abet. As one parent suggests (of course
only to be rejected flat-out by others), “it may take a village” to cause such
a tragedy as the one that has occurred.
The answers and the next steps most appropriate are not
clear to these people; and thus most certainly, not to us. That is partly due to the wandering
conversations that ebb and flow and sometimes dead-end in Jordan Tannahill’s
script but mostly due to the extremely complex issue presented. But what is clear, avoiding the discussions,
the questions, and the resulting self-examinations is most certainly not the answer. As the play ultimately shows, all it takes is
one person finally to emerge willing to tell her or his own truth in order to
point in the direction of a possible path toward future and eventual
reconciliation and maybe forgiveness.
To a person, the cast assembled under the masterful
direction of Evren Odcikin is superb.
The emotional ranges displayed by each person are astoundingly wide --
with jarring expressions of anger, silent pauses of pent-up frustration,
shocked looks of mounting fear, and sudden floods of flowing tears being
examples that one time or another come from several, if not all. The incredible intensity each person brings
to the part portrayed is visceral proof of their individual commitments as
actors to the important, difficult subject matter the play addresses.
Teen suicides, bullying, homophobia, parent/child
non-communication, the often-detrimental role of social media in the
relationships among today’s teens – these are the topics that this cast is
called upon to provide enough stimulation for us as audience to contemplate,
raise questions, and hopefully, take action in our own lives and
communities. As an ensemble, hardly a
better one could have been assembled than the one on the NCTC stage to tackle
such difficult themes.
Rating: 4 E
Late Company continues
through February 24 in the Walker Theatre 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
What a good blog you have here. Please update it more often. This topics is my interest. Thank you. . .
ReplyDeletemuhammad Zukerminocov.com