A History of Freaks
Katie May
Steven Westdahl & Elena Wright |
Like millions of kids before her, as soon as Claire went to
her first circus as a kid, she dreamed of running away someday to be on the
road with the clowns, the animal trainers, and the trapeze artists. Even as a PhD candidate when she became an
avowed “researcher” for life– “I study everything and nothing” – she still
could not help reading books about circuses.
It was while reading such a book on campus that a good-natured, big
smiling guy named Joey stopped to tell her, “I was, I am a clown” and “I grew
up in a circus.”
Their immediate attraction leads Claire to join
now-college-graduate Joey as he returns to his former life at Stromboli’s
Circus where Claire thinks she will now do what she does best – observing – and
where Joey thinks he will spend the rest of his life. In Katie May’s A History of Freaks – now in world premiere as part of Playgrounds
2019 Festival of New Works – both are in for major awakenings as they each
realize their true desires and destinies after opening their eyes and ears to a
bearded, fire-eating lady and a once-conjoined twin, now tight-rope walker.
Wanting “to write a book about traveling circuses in the
modern era,” Claire does her best to remain a bit standoffish and reserved as
she arrives with Joey at the troupe’s current stop in a Midwest, non-distinct
town. Reaction to her is fairly
universal: How can she stay with us because “she doesn’t have an act?” But Claire is now clearly Joey’s girl; and
Joey – whose dad worked with the circus his entire life after Joey’s mom
escaped once Joey was born – is the heir apparent now to run the circus. That designation is at least true in his mind
and that of Eve, the now-deceased owner’s daughter whose sister, Ava, Joey was
supposed to marry before her tragic death on the operating table. Eve now is elated to see that Joey has come
back in order to relieve her the responsibility of running the circus alone;
she is even more ecstatic in her hope that he loves her like he once loved her
other half, Ava.
But Joey’s return is full of surprises for both he and
Eve. First for Eve, there is this Claire,
with whom Joey is staying in her 1975 Winnebago. Second for Joey, the circus is almost
bankrupt; the next three towns have pulled their permits for their
performances; and the ‘freaks’ who were always relegated to the sideshow are
now the main ring’s opening act – including bearded Sabine whom he discovers is
also sexually entertaining after each show curious and horny blokes, town after
town.
In return, Eve, Saline, and the rest of the circus
performers are about to receive their own big and totally unwelcome surprise. Joey plans to end the days of trunks and
tents, taking the circus off road once he finds a “warehouse space” in some
tourist-rich city for a permanent home – a decision further received with
disgust when he announces that there will be no more freaks in the new arena’s center
ring.
Patrick Russell, Sean Garahan & Stephanie Prentice |
As Joey, Patrick Russell at times cannot help but go into
his old routines as a clown as he tells a story or recounts memories; but his
Joey is also anything but funny in his intense seriousness as he plots how to
save the circus. He has that
twenty-something, somewhat cocky confidence that he is right; yet at the same
time, he shows a vulnerable streak of uncertainty about what he really wants
both for himself and for the circus. In
the course of recalling memories, confronting deep sources of guilt, and attempting
to rekindle a zeal for the circus that he assumes is naturally in his blood,
Patrick Russell as Joey impressively displays a wide range of emotional acumen
from silly to fearful to angry to deeply regretful. But in the end, what his Joey is seeking is a
life that is “comforting,” and that search leads him toward a destination
unexpected.
As it turns out, Claire too is seeking a destination and
life that is “comforting” – a word oft repeated in Katie May’s smartly
conceived script. Claire believes
playing the somewhat detached researcher is where it is at, but sitting with a
deck of Tarot cards in front of her leads her to discoveries of a world for
herself that she did not know existed. Her
extensive knowledge of circus history which she shares with her new friends
magically opens up new pages in her always present notebook – pages on which
rather than just recording observations, she begins to recreate herself. Laura Espino begins her portrayal of Claire
as a young woman with little, outward emotional breadth or noticeable reaction who
seems quite willing to stay more in Joey’s and the circus’s shadows. However, bit-by-bit her Claire transforms into
a strong driver of her own, new journey – independent and sure of her own, new-found
‘act’ in the world of circus.
But neither Joey nor Claire sees their new possibilities
without the interventions of the circus family around them. Elena Wright is singularly stunning as the surviving
half of the conjoined twins who once walked with her sister together on parallel
tightropes – the two joined in a co-owned liver. Her sister, Ava, is still very much part of
her life in ways Elena Wright convinces us are totally real. While her Eva can enter in states of
other-worldly trance as she heads up the high, unprotected rigging to perform
her magic, Eva has both feet firmly on the ground in her determined passion for
the circus and its future – maybe a love that matches or even surpasses the passion
she has for Joey. That intertwined love
for both circus and Joey leads her to decisions no one else can predict.
Key to Claire’s eventual life ‘ah-ha’ is Sabine, maybe the
evening’s most arresting, most captivating performance. Stephanie Prentice is a strong-minded,
strong-willed Sabine who is not about to be run-over or run-out by this returning,
so-called college whiz, Joey, whom everyone else seems to hold in such
endearment. Her bearded lady speaks with
a high, feminine voice that belies her no-holes-barred willingness to speak up,
to resist, and to bow down to no one.
But she also has a heart bigger than the big top when it comes to those
most-often ignored in the circus world and even – after some early, big-time
skepticism – for this new arrival she addresses as “College Girl” and whom she
clairvoyantly sees as key for this circus’s future success.
Steven Westdahl, Elana Wright & Sean Garahan |
Rounding out both this excellent cast and the circus members
we meet are Solomon (Sean Garahan) as the sword-swallowing clown and Ron
(Steven Westdahl) as the former animal trainer (losing his beloved four-legged
friends to dipping resources, rising costs of meat, and the mounting pressures
of animal rights protesters). Sol often
moves around in perpetual clown-mode in a quiet kind of Emmett Kelley style,
but he is far from clowning in his ability to give wise advice or to stand up
for what he believes is fair and right for others. Ron is seeking to reinvent himself and find
his new act and plays a cross between a clumsy but lovable buffoon and a crusty
giant of a guy who goes back and forth between tough guy and teddy bear.
Doyle Ott directs the two-hour, two-act, and multi-scene
unfolding of both real-time realities and fantastical imaginings – the latter
sometimes clownishly funny and sometimes dreamily serious.
Enabling the director and cast immensely are the
wonderfully creative and circus-effecting costumes of Jess McGovern.
Scenes run in parallel at times, with one
line leading into another in the opposing scene or with even lines co-spoken. Transitions run overall smoothly, with only some
minor, opening-night awkwardness of June Palladino’s property and Sarah
Phykitt’s scenic entrances and exits on the otherwise bare stage. Inclusions of Steven Westdahl’s becoming an
occasional sideshow barker in between scenes are more intrusive and loud than
script-enhancing while both an opening and closing center-ring announcement of
another night’s performance are frankly just too long and cliché-ridden to be
interesting.
However, those nitpicks are minor in the grand scheme of the
evening – especially for a new work in its first, fully staged outing. Both the Playground cast and creative team as
well as playwright Katie May are to be
richly congratulated for a story that mixes interesting history lessons of
circuses, an intriguing storyline with a number of twists and turns through a
maze of secrets, and an important reminder that there is a little of freak to be
recognized in us all.
Rating: 4 E
A History of Freaks continues
as part of Playground’s 2019 New Works Festival, playing on the following times
and dates: 8 p.m. May 30 and 31; 8 p.m. June 1, 8, and 9 (and also 2
p.m. June 9). Performances are at the
Potrero Stage, 1695 18th Street, San Francisco. Tickets are available online at www.playground-sf.org.
Photos by Mellophoto.com
Photos by Mellophoto.com
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