Top Girls
Caryl Churchill
Rosie Hallett, Summer Brown, Michelle Beck, Monica Lin & Julia McNeal |
It is 1982; and search-firm interviewer Marlene admires
Britain’s Margaret Thatcher: “She’s a tough lady, Maggie; I’d give her a
job.” Marlene has toughed it out herself
in the man’s world where she works and has just been named the new managing
director of her firm. To celebrate, she
is hosting an exclusive dinner party at a local, upscale restaurant; and her
guests are all women who have left their names engraved in the annals of
history, fiction, or myth.
This dream of an evening begins with each bragging about
accomplishments that collectively stretch through the ages – a
female-dressed-as-male pope from the ninth century; a world, adventure traveler
from the staid Victorian Age; a peasant traveler from Chaucer’s Tales who married a nobleman; a woman
warrior from a 1563, Pieter Bruegel painting who leads a charge on the demons
of Hell; and a thirteenth-century girl who has the children of a Japanese
emperor and later becomes a Buddhist nun.
But Marlene’s dream becomes a nightmare as each of the five, female guests
begin to recount what their successes have cost them because they were women in
a patriarchic-defined world, with their mounting, pent-up anger fueled by
brandy leading to a mini-riot to end the dinner party.
With an opening scene that almost forty years later still
feels current, bold, and extraordinary, Caryl Churchill’s 1982-premiering Top Girls opens in 2019 at American
Conservatory Theater, raising many questions of just how much has actually
changed for women in the workplace since the days of Thatcher (and
Reagan). With a cast of nine where
Marlene and four others played by women of color, the accomplishments they earn,
the prices they pay, and the doors shut on them take on much-added significance
as we realize that whatever gains women have made these past four decades since
the play’s debut (gains that still do not match where men are), many of those
gains have not yet been afforded women of color at the same rate as white
women.
But that is just the first of many troubling questions
without many easy answers that the ACT production poses in its Top Girls. Michelle Beck boldly portrays Marlene, making
evident a sense of her inner strength, determination, and willingness to
disrupt the system. Her Marlene has
admirably broken the glass ceiling; but she appears to have done so by
mimicking the ways the men around her have succeeded. She is fiercely independent but also not
particularly stepping forward to help the women around her also succeed. Of those she interviews as part of her job,
she sarcastically describes them as “half a dozen little girls and an arts
graduate who cannot type.”
Marlene has a sister and niece she has not seen in six years
and, as we will discover, has neglected other family obligations in order to
pursue her own life and career – much as the men around her have often
done. We are attracted to Marlene’s
smart style and fearless manner. We
applaud when she says, “Piss off” to the wife of a white man who was passed
over the promotion she got – a woman who insinuates by her looks and manners
that Marlene got the job for reasons other than her competence. But we cringe when we see Marlene time and
again act in some of the worst ways the men of her world often act, with our
left wondering if is there not some other way for women (and men) to forge a
path to success in today’s business world rather than imitation of the male
world’s worst aspects.
Michelle Beck & Gabrilella Momah |
Our questions about Marlene grow larger when we contrast her
with Angie, her teenage niece who is in many ways, yin to her yang. Angie – brilliantly portrayed by Garbriella
Momah – is a lot of what Marlene is not and never was: awkward in stance and
speech, disheveled in appearance, emotionally underdeveloped for her age, and a
school drop-out. But there are also qualities
the two share: a determined drive to escape their childhood home, a burning
desire to be and do better than what life has seemingly dictated them, and a
love-hate relationship with Joyce (Angie’s mom, Marlene’s sister).
There is also a secret we learn that connects the two and
explains the root of those similarities.
What it does not explain is Marlene’s assessment to an office mate that
she does not believe Angie has what it takes to succeed; and with that casually
said statement, she seemingly dismisses any hope for her niece’s future or any
commitment to help her succeed. For one
more reason, Marlene is a dilemma and rich fodder for us as an audience to
contemplate and debate the following day.
Caryl Churchill’s play goes from the opening dinner party to
a scene introducing Angie and the antipathy she has for her life and her mom to
a scene in the office the morning Marlene is announced as the new managing
director finally to a scene one year prior when Marlene surprises Joyce in
showing up in her kitchen on Angie’s birthday.
In each, the skins of the onion slowly unravel as we discover more of
who Marlene really is while also getting to know this somewhat strange but
intriguing girl, Angie.
Nafessa Monroe & Michelle Beck |
Central to both in both similar and different ways is Joyce,
played by Nafeesa Monroe, who also plays through cunning double-casting, the
silent but watching waitress in the opening act’s dinner party. Joyce is viewed by Angie as thwarting her
future because of her motherly restrictions on a restless teenager; the anger
they both show to each other masks a love that peeks through to demonstrate its
true core. Joyce is strong, resolute,
and confident of who she is in her own way and is in some respects a match and
more for her fancy dressed, big-talking sister.
She is the stay-at-home mom that has borne a lot to be so and has been,
as we learn, a sacrificing enabler of Marlene’s career in ways much like wives
have been (and still are) of their husbands everywhere. Her presence in this play and the strong
performance of Nafeesa Moore adds more questions with no easy answers for us to
ponder upon exit, with the play not pointing to how or if a successful business
woman can be mother and boss at the same time.
Julia McNeal & Rose Hallett |
Joining Marlene, Angie, and Joyce is an array of
fantastically contrasting, double-role characters, all played masterfully by
the rest of this cast. Rosie Hallett is
the royally robed Pope Joan whose incredible tale of being a woman posed as a
man and rising up the ranks of the Church is still a story some historians
believe about the actual, ninth-century Pope John VIII. She is also the perfectly attired office
interviewer, Win, who becomes the ‘mother-confessor’ of sorts of a woman in her
mid-career, Louise (Julia McNeal), who is tired of staying in a job where she
trains young men who get promoted over her and is ready to venture into some
unknown position after twenty years for a chance of being recognized/rewarded
for what she knows and can do.
Rosie Hallett, Summer Brown, Julia McNeal, Monica Lin & Monique Hafen Adams |
Julia McNeal is also the dinner guest, Isabella Bird, who defied
all Victorian definitions of what a woman should do in order to travel the back
roads and the mountaintops of the continents, even against all odds of her sex
and a body riddled with physical issues.
Monica Lin is the talkative, excitable Lady Nijo – a thirteenth-century
concubine of the Japanese emperor who does not question what she must do in her
society in order to be successful; she is also Jeanine, a client looking for a
new job full of travel and new sights/challenges. Mrs. Kidd (Monique Hafen Adams), the wife who
thinks her husband should be getting Marlene’s promotion, is also Patient
Griselda, a fictional character who dutifully and without complaint goes
through excruciating tests of her loyalty laid out by her husband. Nell is a colleague of Marlene’s and also
the fearless, chest-beating warrior, Dull Gret, who leads a war on Hell – the
latter portrayed at the dinner party first hilariously and then with unbounded
sorrow, anger, and fury by Summer Brown.
In each case of the five guests of her dream, aspects of Marlene can be
quite easily depicted – aspects to be either admired or questioned, according
to one’s perspective.
All of these women, past and present, have been colorfully and imaginatively attired through the artistic genius of Sarita Fellows. Her women of the past are like those in storybooks on a coffee table while her women of the '80s are wonderful contrasts between those who are dressed to kill (in ways a man's world still wants its women) and those dressed just to exist day-by-day.
All of these women, past and present, have been colorfully and imaginatively attired through the artistic genius of Sarita Fellows. Her women of the past are like those in storybooks on a coffee table while her women of the '80s are wonderful contrasts between those who are dressed to kill (in ways a man's world still wants its women) and those dressed just to exist day-by-day.
Tamilla Woodward directs with a flair that at times almost
gets out-of-hand in its realism of a dinner party, an office full of chatter,
or a family argument. A number of times,
women at the dinner party talk over each other with two or more conversations
happening at once. Sisters scream at
each other simultaneously, making it impossible for either of them or us to
hear/understand. Yet in actuality, these
same dynamics occur in all our everyday lives where deeply felt excitement or
anger reign supreme and/or where egos are worn as crowns that declare, “Listen
to me and my story ... now!” In this
respect, the director’s choices are brilliant even if the delivery is sometimes
difficult to comprehend.
Nina Ball once again creates her own interpretation of a storyline
through her insightful set designs. A
heavy-looking glass wall that arches out from the back stage reminds us of that
ceiling the women at the dinner party have each broken in their own ways, in
their own time periods, with Marlene being the last to shatter it. The pristine, brightly lit (via Barbara
Samuels’ design) office setting where desks are all together in one room makes
us want to see that corner office where Marlene will move the next day. The glass wall breaks open to reveal a
cluttered home packed with reminders of the confined lifetime of Joyce – a home
that seems particularly small, crowded, and plain when sister Marlene arrives.
I must admit that one day later, I like Top Girls much more than I did while watching it. What was sometimes confusing last evening
begins to fit together today upon reflection.
What was frustrating by the portrayals of Marlene, Angie, and Joyce
today leads to questions and comparisons of how women and girls – especially
those of color – are still viewed and treated from school age onward – both
those considered ‘successful’ and those deemed not now and never will be. American Conservatory Theater stages a play
some might see as dated to prove that Top
Girls is perhaps more timely than ever.
Rating: 4.5 E
Top Girls continues
through October 13, 2019 at American Conservatory Theater, 405 Geary Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available online
at http://www.act-sf.org/ or by calling the box office 415-749-2228.
Photos by Kevin Berne
No comments:
Post a Comment