|

COVER STORY | IN THE NEWS | MEDIA MAVEN | STAGE MATTERS
OFF THE PAVEMENT | TALK OF THE TABLE | THE HUM | CALENDAR
February 1, 2007

Jake's
Women --
Lively Production, Problematic Play
by WILLIAM
S. KOWINSKI
Right Theresa Ireland as older Molly, Kim Hodell
as Julie, Derby McLaughlin as younger Molly. Photo courtesy NCRT.
There's a particular interest
in a writer seeing a play about a writer who is too much the
observer and not enough the participant in his own life, especially
when one is among those reviewers who began as a participant
in theatre -- as a playwright, actor, director and even a song
composer, and whose role now is as journalist and judge.
Well, when you get a role, play it.
In Neil Simon's play Jake's Women, a writer
in his 50s imagines scenes with the women in his life as the
fate of his marriage in crisis is decided. The current production
at the North Coast Rep features fine performances. On opening
night, a slow start with shaky (presumably New York) accents
got a burst of energy and definition from Suza Lambert Bowser
as the psychiatrist with the heart of a chorus girl. Young Derby
McLaughlin, who played Jake's daughter Molly at 12 years old,
provided not only another hit of vitality but of reality: She
was winsome and wonderful, inhabiting her part completely.
Christen Condry Whisenhunt also created a credible
and funny character (Sheila, Jake's current girlfriend during
his separation) with economy and comic grace. Theresa Ireland
as Molly at 21, Shelley Stewart as Jake's sister, Karen, and
Jolene Hayes as Maggie, Jake's wife at the start of the play,
all had their shining moments.
Kim Hodel had the plum part of Julie, Jake's perfect
first wife, who he fell in love with when she was 21 and he was
24, and who died at 35. She played it with the moral beauty and
physical radiance that forces us to wonder where the line is
between Jake idealizing his dead wife and remembering her accurately
-- was she really this wonderful? Hodel is convincing as both
fantasy and tragically lost reality, in a memorable performance.
Michael Thomas as Jake had the longest and most
difficult role, as he was required to hold the stage and hold
the play together for the entire evening. Some of the most taxing
scenes come late in the second act, when Jake's frenzy accelerates
and then must be transformed into the resolution of acceptance
and vulnerability. He did yeoman's work, keeping the audience
involved, and laughing.
After 30 years and almost that many plays, Neil
Simon knew how to generate laughter and tug at the heartstrings
by the time this play was first produced in 1992. There are lots
of laughs, some provocative remarks, and scenes that play like
crazy. A dead wife gets to meet her daughter at 12 and 21 --
how can you fail with a scene like that? (In this production,
it doesn't fail.)
Simon's laudable efforts to go beyond his usual
stage presentation with imaginary encounters often succeed individually
-- he plays with how much control Jake actually has over what
he imagines, and over the characters in his fantasies. But even
given all these audience-pleasing and thought-provoking elements,
this play doesn't quite hold together.
I hadn't seen it before, either on stage or what
I suspect is the more successful television version (which Simon
rewrote completely), so I strongly suspect its weaknesses are
in the writing rather than James Read's efficient direction,
the fine performances he nurtured or any other element of this
production.
Beyond even the sometimes mawkish lines, the unlikely
and too-perfect anecdotes explaining Jake's too-pat problems,
and the strained clichés that go by in the last moments
like stray bullets, the play as a whole totters on our not really
knowing who Jake is. Jake's life beyond his fantasies has no
reality, and neither does he.
This is also important because the central tension
comes from Jake being unable to stop fantasizing his life (which
gives him control) long enough to trust it and live it. Certainly
there are some rueful truths about writers in this play. I've
been known to complain that the problem with life is that you
can't revise. But Jake's fantasies aren't demonstrably related
to his work, which neither he nor anyone else talks about or
seems to care about, but to some generic and one-dimensional
image of The Writer.
There are credible moments, as in his second-act
frenzy of rapid-fire fantasies of vacations spots and new homes,
like a writer brainstorming plots. But the writer thing becomes
a weak conceit, and a very wobbly basis for a play.
Thomas and especially Hayes (in the second most
difficult role) are very good in the final scenes, when the script
has other significant problems. Though I found the play unconvincing,
the North Coast Rep production is certainly worth seeing for
wit, emotionally indelible scenes and the array of satisfying
performances.

Now on stage: Lettice
and Lovage is at Ferndale Rep until Feb. 11. As a fan of
British comedy, verbal wit and Peter Shaffer, I'm disappointed
that a series of circumstances (like the flu bug) has prevented
me from seeing it yet. I hope nothing prevents you.
Coming up: First
year students of the Dell'Arte International School of Physical
Theatre present Gotta Go!, an evening of comedia on Feb.
1-3 at the Carlo Theatre, followed by the second-year MFA students
with adaptations of short stories by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and
Isabel Allende in Las Dos Marias on Feb. 8-11, also at
the Carlo Theatre in Blue Lake.
Sanctuary Stage presents The Duelist, an
original comedia performance, at Mazzotti's in Arcata for lunch
on Feb. 18 and dinner on Feb. 19 and 20.

To extend the theatrical conversation and expand it beyond
the North Coast, I've started a Stage Matters blog, at
stagematters.blogspot.com.
You can also e-mail me at stagematters@sbcglobal.net.
COVER STORY | IN THE NEWS | MEDIA MAVEN | STAGE MATTERS
OFF THE PAVEMENT | TALK OF THE TABLE | THE HUM | CALENDAR
Comments? Write
a letter!

© Copyright 2007, North Coast Journal,
Inc.
|