Showing posts with label Austene Van. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austene Van. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2008

August Wilson: Gem of the Ocean



When:
4/24/08
Where: McGuire Proscenium Stage at the Guthrie

Writing for the Strib, Rohan Preston called
Gem of the Ocean "coruscating." I had to look it up. The word means "to gleam with intermittent flashes: glitter, sparkle." It fits this production of the first play in August Wilson's Century Cycle—not the first he wrote, but the first chronologically in his series of ten plays, one for each decade of the 20th century.

Set in 1904, Gem is moving, mysterious, and profound. Is Aunt Ester really 287 years old? What happens to make Caesar treat his own people with such brutality? Can Citizen Barlow's soul be washed? Will Black Mary follow in Ester's footsteps? This is a Penumbra production, but it would have been too big for its home stage in the Halle Q. Brown/Dr. Martin Luther King Community Center; it needs the room it gets on the proscenium stage in the blood-red McGuire theater. (This is the reddest room I have ever been in. The walls are red, the seats are red--are the floors red? I think they are.)

There is one scene in particular, during which Ester leads Citizen and the other characters to the City of Bones, built from the bodies of slaves who died during the Middle Passage, where the action and the lighting would not have worked in a smaller space. During this wrenching and powerful scene, a woman seated in front of us quietly sobbed.

Austene Van plays the role of Black Mary, Aunt Ester's assistant. I'm convinced Van is really triplets, or at least twins; she's also director of two more shows still playing in St. Paul, Blues in the Night and Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill, and she's understudy for Aunt Ester.

When I interviewed Van for my MinnPost column on Lady Day, I asked her how she ended up doing all of these things at once:

It's what we do as actors. We usually take on a few things, and I can kind of sum it up like this: "Being a woman is hard work. Not without joy or even ecstasy, but relentless, unending work." Maya Angelou said that. Yeah, I'm tired, and yeah, this is not easy, but I love it, I love going to work, and I budget my time and try to take care of myself and focus. You make time for what you love.

Many of the plays Van is involved with (including, previously, Ain't Misbehavin', Dinah Was, Blue, and Black Nativity) have music at their core. I asked if she sought that out or it just happened:

People seek me out to direct them or be in them or choreograph them.... I'm in half and half, half straight plays, half musical, but I always find rhythm. I'm always in something that has rhythm. Culturally, everything we do stems out of some kind of rhythm, how we walk and talk, how we communicate. It's jazz.

She noted that Gem is full of the rhythm of Wilson's language:

We try to be mindful about being spot-on with our words. Change one word and the rhythm is off.

I read the play before I saw it (truthfully, I finished the final act during intermission). That and talking with Van made me more conscious of the rhythm of the words.

Coincidence: My friend Jennifer Nelson, who led the African Continuum Theatre Company in Washington, DC for many years, is currently directing Gem of the Ocean at Everyman Theater in Baltimore. Read about it in the Baltimore Sun.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill


When:
4/11/08
Where: Park Square Theatre
Who: Thomasina Petrus as Billie Holiday; Thomas West as Jimmy Powers


Because I'm writing about Lady Day
for MinnPost, I go to see it ASAP—on the first night of previews. I saw Bud, Not Buddy in previews, and Blues in the Night. Not sure I'd want to see a Shakespeare play in previews. It seems best to let them work out the bugs before seeing a three-hour production.

Lady Day is a musical play about the life of Billie Holiday. Songs she sang and recorded are stitched together by scenes in which she talks about her life. Although there are two characters—Holiday and her piano player/accompanist, Jimmy Powers—it's really a one-woman play, with the actor playing Powers required to do very little acting. In its original version, it's also a one-act play. The version we see has two, a longer first act and a very short and powerful second act.

Just before the lights go down, we hear a recorded message: "Please turn off all cell phones, as they did not exist in 1959." Clever but unfortunately not completely effective.

Thomasina Petrus plays Holiday, as she did four years ago when Lady Day ran at the Old Arizona in Minneapolis. (I met Petrus in the lobby of the Artists' Quarter last week; she had come down after a tech rehearsal—the Park Square is just upstairs from the AQ—to say hi to Davis Wilson, and I happened to be passing by.) The first song gives me goosebumps. Petrus's voice and phrasing sound so close to the Billie Holiday I've heard on recordings that it's uncanny.

We learn that Holiday wrote "God Bless the Child" for her mother (who was barely older than she was); that she spent time in prison; that when she was singing in the South with Artie Shaw's band, they all ate in the kitchen. We hear tales of suffering, insults, and indignities, and we hear songs: "Where Our Love Has Gone," "Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do," and, of course, "Strange Fruit," after which the audience does not clap. The only appropriate response to this song—whenever it is sung, whoever sings it—is stunned silence.

Petrus is amazing. Thomas West (who plays Jimmy Powers) isn't an actor, but he is a fine piano player, and that's what matters most in this setting. The ending is a knockout.

As we get up to leave, HH notices director Austene Van sitting at the back, talking with people from the crew, taking their comments about the preview. He says "Go meet her" because he knows I want to interview her. I hesitate because I'm so moved by the play's ending that I'm not sure what will come out of my mouth. Will I calmly introduce myself or boo-hoo? I'm okay, we meet, and we exchange contact information. I look forward to learning more about this play from the director and the star.

Photo: Thomasina Petrus as Billie Holiday. Courtesy Park Square Theatre.