The Flick
Annie Baker
Justin Howard & Chris Ginesi |
Entering the Ashby Stage setting, it is at first confusing
where to find the ticketed seat.
Mirroring the regular seating area is another set of seat rows, which
after a second look, are clearly those of a small movie theatre. Looking further, there are the curtained
walls with movie-house sconces, windows on the upper back wall to a projector
room, lighted exit doors, and of course on the floor among the red seats, lots
of scattered popcorn. Soon it is
movie-house dark; lights flicker and reflect on the back wall as a movie is
projected somewhere behind where we sit; and surround sound envelops us with a
movie’s dramatic score.
And then the sounds and flickers cease; harsh florescent
lights come on; and into the movie theatre in front of us come two guys with
dust mops and broom pans. One says
matter-of-factly, “We call this the walk through;” the other shrugs, frozen
like a statue; and the first starts to clean up popcorn. For the next several minutes, no more dialog
... Just mopping. And with that, welcome
to the winner of the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Annie Baker’s The Flick, now is a highly unusual,
completely fascinating, and patience-demanding production at Shotgun Players.
Justin Howard |
That first few minutes of mostly silence on the stage except
for the umph- umph-swish of dust mops is just a precursor of a sizable
proportion of the next three hours (plus a fifteen minute intermission). Much of what is said during Annie Baker’s
slice-of-life play are the things that are never spoken aloud. Long stares into space or at a fellow worker
sweeping, pregnant pauses after an abrupt question by one as an answer is slow
to come from the other, and elongated expressions that speak volumes without
ever speaking words are as important – if not more so – than any of the
brilliant dialogue that the playwright has in fact included in her play about
three movie theatre employees who go to work as soon as the rest of us clear
out of the theatre at a movie’s end.
Twenty-year old Avery – an African American, Clark
University student currently taking a break from school – is the novice
sweeper, so inexperienced that when handed a dust mop, he takes what seems an
eternity to figure out where to put his hands properly on its handle. Watching with skeptical and somewhat
unbelieving eye is Sam, a thirty-five-year old white guy and veteran sweeper of
three years at this small, run-down theatre that has yet to convert from
projected movie reels to digital – something that now seems inevitable since
all the big production companies are announcing they will only make new movies
in digital formats. To Avery who admits
movies “they’re like my life,” replacing projection for digital is “immoral.” For Sam, who cares as long as there is still
popcorn to be sold and floors to be swept?
The action of Annie Baker’s script is mostly only in dry and
wet mopping as we continue to catch glimpses of movies ending and the two guys
with trash can and mops enter and exit.
But what we slowly begin to see is that life happens in these harshly
lit minutes between darkened arenas and Hollywood hits. Bit by bit, Sam (Chris Ginesi) and Avery
(Justin Howard) slip out information about their lives outside their jobs;
about their passions (or lack thereof); about things that haunt them, piss them
off, leave them confused. Friendship is
slow to come but somehow it seems to slip in unawares by either – or at least
never admitted by either. But laughter
and smiles and even a high five start to become a part of their interaction;
and eventually they and we begin to see deeper, darker, but very real parts of
who they may be as people beyond their mopping and cleaning.
Justin Howard & Ari Rampy |
But there is also a third employee, Rose, who was once a
fellow sweeper but was promoted over the more senior Sam to be the
projectionist. Rose is often seen only on
the other side of the small windows where the movie’s flickers originate; but
when she does saunter in to the below with the boys, the whole climate suddenly
becomes more electric and unpredictable.
Rose (Ari Rampy) in her ripped black jeans and hoodie moves about like she
is on the dance floor of some late-night club, talking in a kind of cool jive
and definitely creating both tension and excitement on especially Sam’s part,
who claims she is probably lesbian but clearly has other hopes for himself.
Ari Rampy, Chris Ginesi & Justin Howard |
As days elapse and cleaning sessions mount up, this cast of
three grabs our undivided attention as we wait for the next round of mop-ups
and alternations between a few spoken words, a couple new revelations, and a
lot more of the telling silences and stares.
While on the one hand nothing overly dramatic and life-changing occurs,
topics emerge in conversations touching on personal quirks and fears, past
tragedies and current struggles, flirts with death and questions about
survival. And even though at times life
for these three seems to move at a snail’s pace, their passing minutes together
become rich, riveting moments for us as an audience to understand that for
every person, every life, and every occupation, living day-to-day is an epic
waiting to be told.
A recurring metaphor used by the playwright is the popular
game of movie fans, “six degrees of separation.” Movie trivia king Avery accepts challenges by
a thoroughly enthralled Sam to connect in six movies or less people like
Michael J. Foxx and Brittany Spears. Sam’s
challenges and Avery’s oft-quick responses become an important bridge
connecting the two. What becomes more
and more clear is that his game is easier to play connecting random others than
the real life game of any two of this threesome finding ways for solid,
permanent bonds.
Jon Tracy directs with evident reverence and trust Annie
Baker’s script with its pauses and silences designated along with spoken
dialogue. What is remarkable about his
direction and the acting of the three principals is that all looks so natural,
as if spontaneously happening in small, real-time snippets of their lives. At times, I almost wondered if these three
actors are actually in real life these three people snatched from some small,
local movie house in Berkeley. There is
never any hint that they are in fact acting as they stand with silent looks
blank, worried, sad, bored, intrigued, amused, angry, etc., etc. It all looks too every day real.
Certainly the set design of Randy Wong-Westbrooke enables
this sense of watching real scenes play out in an actual movie house. Kurt Landisman’s lighting puts us inside the darkened
theatre as a movie is playing somewhere on the screen behind us and then startles
us with the jarring realities of red chairs worn, ceiling tiles stained from
past leaks, and a floor full of patrons’ messes (those kernels and cups being
some of the props designed by Devon Labelle).
Kris Barrera’s sound and video artistry brings in the final, necessary
elements to make the movie sequences come to full life all around us while
Nikki Anderson-Joy ensures the movie employees look the part and their
ages/personalities through her costume designs.
The question that must be raised and the one possible
criticism that is obvious is does The
Flick actually need to be three hours in length to have the intended impact
that Annie Baker and Jon Tracy hope to have.
Frankly, I am torn on that one.
Did the play seem long? But of
course. Were there times, especially
during the first half of the first act, when it seemed little-to-nothing was
happening. Well, yes. But in the end, are those initial sequences
needed in order to help us understand these three people and why their
connections with each other are so difficult?
Well, probably so.
So my advice is definitely do not miss the opportunity to
see this outstanding production of The
Flick. It is a unique opportunity,
one so masterfully directed and one where these three principal actors become
people we might in fact meet in real life if we hang around next time the
lights go up after watching a movie at a local theatre.
Rating: 4.5 E
The Flick
continues in extended run through October 6, 2019 at the Ashby Stage of Shotgun Players,
1901 Ashby Avenue, Berkeley. Tickets are
available at https://shotgunplayers.org/ or by calling 510-841-6500.
Photos by Ben Kratz Studio
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