Sovereignty
Mary Kathryn Nagle
Elizabeth Frances, Adam Magill, Kholan Studi, Scott Coopwood, Andrew Roa, Robert I. Mesa |
Indian-rights lawyer and a member of the Cherokee Nation,
Mary Kathryn Nagle, is also an accomplished playwright. She has written an extremely powerful and
educating play, Sovereignty, that
connects the history of her own ancestors and their legal battles for Native
rights with present-day congressional and court challenges that still threaten
those constitutional rights. With a cast
and creative team that include a number of Native American members from various
tribes, Marin Theatre Company presents the West Coast premiere of Mary Kathryn
Nagle’s Sovereignty in a production
that is nothing short than a must-see.
The playwright’s own great-great-great-great grandfather,
Major Ridge, was speaker of the Cherokee Nation Tribal Council in the 1820s and
‘30s and was awarded that rank by Andrew Jackson himself after helping the U.S.
win the Creek and Seminole Wars. His
story and that of his lawyer son, John, and his first-friend, then-rival John
Ross – Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation – constitutes the historical core
of Ms. Nagle’s Sovereignty, as well
as their roles for and against the relocation of the Native Peoples.
Elizabeth Frances |
Two stories blend seamlessly back-and-forth under the magical
direction of Jasson Minadakis, with a half-dozen actors who play different
roles in both time periods often switching persona, eras, and thus scenes in a
split second before our eyes. The
director and playwright ensure that a complicated history is related clearly
and with much impact even though its telling involves multiple court cases,
presidential manipulation, and intra-tribal disagreements while also
introducing blossoming romances and domestic strife in both time periods.
Andrew Roa & Craig Marker |
When the Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall rules in
1832 that in fact the Cherokee Nation is the one and only sovereign over their own
lands, we hear Jackson respond hatefully and defiantly, “John Marshall made the
decision; let him enforce it.” The
president’s refusal to uphold the law of the land (Sound familiar?) leads in
the end to Father and Son Ridge – as white Georgians are taking Cherokee-owned
lands and killing Native families – to reluctantly advocate and sign a new
treaty to abdicate their lands and to relocate into new, western
territories.
Elizabeth Frances & Jake Waid |
Ella Derwhowitz & Robert I. Mesa |
Craig Marker alternates his Southern-polite but clearly disingenuous
President Jackson role to become Special Victim’s Unit detective, Ben O’Connor,
who falls for the modern Sarah. Ben from
the beginning trips over himself in his ignorance and faux pas concerning
Native peoples (even using the word “Injun” at one point). His naivite is too quickly forgiven by Sarah
and even her initially doubtful family.
The title of his position becomes cruel irony as Craig Marker gives a
chilling performance that is even more upsetting than the one he gives as the
notorious Jackson.
Adam McGill & Kholan Studi |
Finally, Scott Coopwood takes on a number of mostly
repulsive roles in both eras, his role being noted in the program as “White
Chorus Man.” Whether a modern drunk in
the casino hollering at Officer Watie, “Redskin, out of my way,” or threatening with his gun as a white soldier the in 1830s the
Christian-observant Elias (“Let me hear you pray, Boy, for that heathen soul of
yours”), Mr. Coopwood is exceptional in being the worst of the white race –
historical and modern.
Annie Smart’s scenic design is elegantly simple with an
ever-present scrim that lets us see but keeps us purposefully separated from an
idyllic, noble sky and landscape that are created by projections designer Mike
Post and lit with morning and evening grandeur by Danny Osburn. E.B. Smart deserves big kudos for the two
time periods’ dresses, uniforms, suits, and outfits that often switch even as a
character says one sentence in one era and then switches to the next era and
sentence of a new role, now in a new costume.
The excellent creative team is rounded out by the habitually stellar
work of Sara Huddleston as sound designer.
Sovereign is a
gripping, emotional, awareness-awakening history lesson that has present-day
implications for what we as Americans need to be paying more attention to and
advocating to our current U.S. Senators, in particular, for needed
legislation. A 25-year-old bill known as
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) that permits the tribal nations to prosecute
anyone (i.e., Native Americans and
those not) who violates women on tribal lands has run its time-limited course
and must be renewed by Congress. The
House has done so; but the bill is stalled in the Senate. For this reason and many more, Marin
Theatre’s Sovereignty is not only a
must-see production for its theatrical excellence and script brilliance, it is
a have-to-see for its implicit call for us as audience members to join the
Sarah’s of the world to fight for the constitutional rights of all Native
Americans – most critically in the present, Native women.
Rating: 5 E, MUST-SEE
Sovereignty
continues through October 20, 2019 at
Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley CA, with a special
performance April 30 at Grace Cathedral, San Francisco (12 p.m.). Tickets for all performances are available online
at http://www.marintheatre.org or by calling the box office
Tuesday – Sunday, 12 -5 p.m.
Photos
by Kevin Berne
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