Jazz
Adapted by Nambi E. Kelley
Based on the Book by Toni Morrison
Dezi Solèy & C. Kelly Wright |
As mourners audibly sob and somewhere a choir sings the
gospel hymn “Steal Away,” a stunned-looking, steely-eyed woman approaches the rectangle
of flowers guarding the unseen corpse of the young girl whose portrait we see
near-by. With increasing snarl, she
hisses, “Look at that face ... Cream at the top of milk-pail face ... That
sneaky face.” And with that, she draws a
knife and slashes downward to the horrored gasps of those gathered to mourn,
slashing the dead girl’s serenity.
From that desperate plunge of the blade in the spring of
1926 in New York’s Harlem comes pouring waves of memories that call and answer
to each other like the instruments playing the background, bluesy jazz music that
underscores their appearances before us.
The revengeful act of this woman, Violet, is targeted at the young
lover, Dorcas, of Violet’s unfaithful husband, Joe, after he shot the girl in
his own act of crazed jealousy. We soon
learn that these acts of violence have many, complicated, often-sad,
intertwining events and causes behind them – some going back many years
prior.
The Cast of Jazz |
In Marin Theatre Company’s achingly stunning, grippingly
engaging West Coast premiere of Nambi E. Kelley’s Jazz – a 2017 adaptation of Pulitzer and Nobel Prize-winning Toni
Morrison’s 1992 historical novel by the same name – the memories and the
subsequent events of Violet’s rashness proceed in a style much like that of the
play’s and book’s title, Jazz. With each encounter of the story taking on an air of
improvisation; with parallel scenes that both blend and clash in duet, and with
words that musically flow alternatively in harsh staccato and in long, hypnotic
extensions, Awoye Timpo directs Jazz
to a beat that mirrors the new music form that was sweeping through the streets
of the 1920’s Harlem that Nambi E. Kelley’s play visits.
C. Kelly Wright |
C. Kelly Wright heads an all-star cast as the emotionally
erratic but determinedly focused Violet who is in search for answers as to who
was this girl that her husband loved and led him on a life-erupting, wanderlust
venture. Her Violet recalls the memories
of her earlier times in Vesper County, Virginia where life was particularly
hard for all African Americans as whites were seeking their revenge and their sickening
paybacks for their losses of the Civil War and their free-labor slaves. It was there as a girl-turning-woman she flat-out
resolves to her grandmother, True Belle, (Margo Hall) to have “no babies” and
to “find me a job, a man, and forget watching mama in that well” – the last a
memory Violet fights to escape of her mother’s tragic death. C. Kelly Wright commands the part of Violet
with such incredible finesse and interpretation that every snippet of a
Virginia memory or of a current, Harlem moment is gigantic in its powerful,
oft-arresting effect.
Her Violet plays out more than once in a stage memory the
first time she met Joe Trace – an introduction after he either fell-out or
purposefully jumped out (according to whose version we believe) of a tree
almost to crush his target – the beautiful, young Violet. Joe was perched there trying to catch a
glimpse of his mind-deranged mother, Wild, who had abandoned him and who now
roamed like an animal the Virginia countryside.
The memories of that first encounter and the night that follows
erotically come to life in a blues-filled, body-pumping dance that leaves no
doubt of the love Violet and Joe once had.
Michael Gene Sullivan & C. Kelly Wright |
Michael Gene Sullivan continues his Bay Area reputation for
award-winning performances as he captures the rough and raw essence of his Joe
Trace. We are initially and magnetically
drawn to Joe for his life-loving zeal and passion for his young wife as she
recalls their hard-life but happy-together days in Virginia and their move to a
heaven-sounding Harlem where he has told her there are “whole streets where
Negroes own their own houses.” But his
Joe is also a man for whom we come to have strong aversion as he begins to fawn
over and then paw with roaming hands the naively willing and encouraging Dorcas
(Dezi Solèy) – a teen who is too caught up in Harlem’s rich and lusty music as
she acquiesces too easily to a man more than twice her age.
Ms. Solèy’s own performance is both mesmerizing and
maddening to watch as we see the young Dorcas play so sweetly and literally
into the roaming hands of the near-drooling Joe. (In a stroke of casting genius, Dezi Solèy
also plays the mother, Wild, that Joe earlier has manically sought.) Once deceased, her Dorcas becomes a living,
forward-staring portrait to whom Violet continually rants and raves but from
whom Violet so wants answers and understanding.
Besides True Belle, Margo Hall is distinctively strong-jawed
and open-hearted as the aunt named Alice who raised Dorcas. After Dorcas’s demise, Alice frequently finds
herself both answering the door and the trying to escape the pounding of
questions as Violet repeatedly arrives seeking answers about her victim. But in a dose of solace and friendship that
clearly surprises even her, Dorcas’ blunt, strong-willed Aunt begins to take an
increasingly sympathetic turn. Brava to
Margo Hall for a superbly fine performance.
Lisa Lacy & Tiffany Tenille |
Like a jazz number that jumps suddenly in tempo, lead
instrument, and musical perspective, so does Nambi E. Kelley’s Jazz.
We hear accounted viewpoints through the titillating gossip and confidently
held opinions of Malvonne, played with hands firmly on hips and eyes seeing all
by Lisa Lacy. Tiffany Tenille is
Dorcas’s young friend Felice (among other roles), who – when finding time to
chatter with Dorcas – adds a faster beat and snappy steps to the tale’s
music-like telling. Dane Troy steps into
a variety of roles both in Virginia and in Harlem, most notably as the
fast-dancing, totally jazz-jiving Acton, a teenage boy who awakens Dorcas out
of her Joe-induced slumber some might call a nightmare.
Paige Mayes |
Accompanying and often comforting Violet throughout her
memory search for answers of her manic questions of who, what, and why is
Parrot – a once-gift from Joe who has an omnipresence in both her knowing looks
and her songs of understanding as she sits perched to the side onstage. Paige Mayes projects uncanny, birdlike
ability with her slight head cocks, her bill-shaped pursing of lips, and her
piercing but humor-filled eyes that see what the humans around her are mostly missing. Her lyrical voice sings in a variety of
period styles with snippets of songs that give telltale signs of her avian
intuition of seeing the truth behind the love and the lust as well as the tears
and the torments occurring around her.
Director Awoye Timpo allows the dreams and realities to mix
and blur on a mostly blank, raised stage
designed by Kimie Nishikawa. The
wooden stage’s surrounding steps become resting spots for cast members as they
pause in their parts of the story-telling to watch the scripted solos or duets
occurring around them – much like players in a jazz band watch as a drummer or
sax player takes off on a musical journey while the others just take it
in. Lighting by Jeff Rowlings adds its
dreamy effects against a scrim-curtained backdrop and its own flairs of
colorful embellishments in swirling, feathery twirls in the above, recessed
ceiling. Gregory Robinson’s sound design
chimes in for effects both here-and-now and ethereal. Joanna Haigood’s choreography brings the joy
of a broom-jumping wedding in Virginia and the sexy and wild innovations of
Harlem’s 1920s. And the ongoing fusion
of times, places, moods, and memories receives a pallet of clarity through the
wide range of costumes deliciously designed by Karen Perry that range from the
night-club wild to the Sunday, go-to-church proper.
Underlying the play is a score composed and orchestrated by
San Francisco’s jazz artist extraordinaire, Marcus Shelby. He leads no less than twelve talented
musicians (including one vocalist, Jamie Zimmer) in jazz and blues enriched
background music, produced as a recording by Eric Moffat.
Besides the fascinating, haunting storyline of Nambi E.
Kelley’s adapted Jazz, there is a
parallel telling of important history of both the post-war South of the early
twentieth century and of the early days of African Americans changing the
course of musical and American history in the 1920’s Harlem. There is also a strong theme of the
resilience, strength, trials, and triumphs (even if small and temporary) of the
African American women of the period.
Each of the women portrayed on the Marin stage is a particular portrait
of a girl or woman who is figuring out or has long-ago figured out how to
survive, stay actively alive (even as a ghost), and in her own way thrive in the oft-messed-up
(by men) world around her. For me, those
portrayals are the real beauty and will likely be my lasting memory of this
must-see production of Jazz.
Rating: 5 E, MUST-SEE
Jazz
continues through May 19, 2019 at at Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley. Tickets are available online at https://tickets.marintheatre.org/Online/ or by calling the box office at
415-388-5208, Tuesday – Sunday, noon – 5 p.m.
Photo Credits: Kevin
Berne
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