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Praise for Flying Machine's "Lintel"
"Fabulous... artfully written and staged"
- News & Observer, "Best Bets" 10/31/03
"A unique and rapturous theatrical experience... The Librarian
wonders if he would recognize a miracle if he saw it? To which I
can only reply: I would. I saw one Saturday night: it's called Underneath
the Lintel."
- Scott Ross, Robert's Reviews (Full review)
"Berger's script was beautifully written, rich with details
and idiosyncratic characterization, and a fascinating quest that
was at once sad and funny, and blessedly devoid of cliches and generalities.
Perry's direction was savvy and lively, and the performance was
sincere, focused and compelling in every minute. The audience was
rapt, and I was willing to follow this character as far as he required
on this global journey. It was exquisite, and it's easily among
my favorite productions I've seen in the Triangle or anywhere. It'll
be a shame if this brief run in Raleigh is the last of it."
-- N&O critic Orla Swift
May 30, 2001
Outside the Box
The intelligent, challenging Three Days of Rain
asks how much our lives are determined by the structures we inhabit
By Maria Pramaggiore
"It is not given to every man to take a bath of multitude,"
wrote the poet Charles Baudelaire in 1869 in Paris Spleen, "enjoying
a crowd is an art." Baudelaire is well known for his description
of the quintessential figure of the modern city: the flaneur, a
man who strolls and saunters, possessing, as the poet put it, "the
hate of the home, and the passion for roaming." One irony of
Richard Greenberg's Three Days of Rain, Flying
Machine Theatre Company's current production, is that its central
character, Ned Janeway, is both a would-be flaneur and an unassuming
architect who, along with his partner Theo Wexler, becomes world
famous for designing a private residence in a Long Island suburb.
Ned's desire to be "as much at home among the facades of houses
as a citizen is in his four walls" (as Walter Benjamin said
of the flaneur) seems to be at odds with his temperament and his
professional reputation. Greenberg emphasizes this tension by referencing
German Romantic notions of architecture as "frozen music."
The contradictions underlying the play's architectural motif ask
us to consider whether or not architecture embodies who we are and
how we live. Do our public buildings, private residences and monuments
reflect our culture, and/or are they impediments that circumscribe
our potential for creativity? Are we enabled or entombed by the
edifices we design, build, buy, rent and think we own?
On one level, this play is concerned with family, propertyand legacy.
In the first act, Ned Janeway's vagabond son, Walker, discovers
an abandoned apartment that Ned and Theo shared as young business
partners in 1960, an empty shell 35 years past its prime. He makes
an announcement that resonates throughout the play, although its
claim is never fully realized. About to attend a meeting to settle
his father's estate, Walker tells his sister Nan, "Now we are
finally going to find out what belongs to us," referring not
only to the legacy of their father's silence and indifference, and
their mother Lina's emotional instability, but also to the jewel
in the crown of their father's architectural career, the Janeway
House. Featured in Life magazine in 1963, the fictional house casts
a large shadow across the play's characters, though no action occurs
there and the audience is never treated to a glimpse of a plan,
elevation or photograph. One brief exchange of dialogue provides
a description, however. The design of its windows--which Nan refers
to with a wink as "fenestration"--highlights the symmetry
of solid and void. "The house is a prism," Walker adds,
"with a different light in every room."
On a deeper level, the play focuses on the way our relationships
with other people are always implicated in the spaces and structures--apartments,
houses, city sidewalks and suburban streets--that we share, sell,
inhabit, cohabit, inherit and leave behind. Janeway House is, to
borrow another phrase from Baudelaire, an "edifice of the impalpable."
It is a structure that Greenberg uses quite successfully to embody
the hopes and disappointments of three generations. Commissioned
by Ned Janeway's parents and therefore a professional and personal
undertaking, the house functions as physical structure and ineffable
idea, an award-winning architectural marvel and yet, perhaps, something
less than a home. To Walker and Nan, the house has the potential
to be an ideal space--a prism that has the power to contain light
without obliterating its variability. When Walker decides to end
his nomadic existence and live at Janeway House, sister Nan--like
most of us, in thrall to the American valorization of home-ownership--wants
to oblige. She believes that the house will take care of him, like
a child taking in a parent. Their lifelong friend Pip Wexler, Theo's
son, endorses the plan, recognizing and resenting the fact that
Walker has been in pain for as long as they have known each other.
What's so fascinating about the decisions Walker, Nan and Pip make
about Janeway House is the extraordinary degree to which they are
predicated upon an ignorance of history. The play's bifurcated structure
translates the architectonic tension between solid and void, between
parents and children, into story. Both acts take place in the same
Manhattan apartment, but the second act takes us back to 1960, when
the apartment teemed with jazz, cigarettes, youthful ambition and
insecurity. The set design offers compelling reminders of the architectural-historical
theme of fullness and emptiness. The first act minimizes the distinction
between inside and out. An incomplete exterior wall, constructed
of unfinished lumber, allows the city to penetrate the empty apartment
with images and sounds, notably car alarms. Another set detail foreshadows
the importance of "fenestration" and of glass barriers
that are too easily breached: The shape of the apartment's abstract
skylight is eerily reminiscent of a coffin.
In the second act, however, the energy of the city feeds the apartment's
inhabitants, who in turn reinvigorate the colorful, smoke-and-music-filled
space. During the "three days of rain" that Ned writes
about in his journal, the apartment is a haven, a true home, protecting
Ned and Lina from the outside world.
The performers are more than equal to the challenge the play imposes
with its trope of time reversal. Julian Chachula, Jr. as Pip, the
self-deprecating soap opera actor who means to enjoy life, is especially
dynamic. Chachula's endearing and comic turn as the affable Pip
in the first act manages to hint at the undertones of anguish that
plague his father Theo in the second act. Jerome Johnson delivers
a strong performance as the reticent yet intense Ned Janeway. Robin
Monteith makes a difficult task look easy: She distinguishes the
imperturbable Nan from the near-hysterical Lina without resorting
to caricature, a potential problem arising from the script's overly
broad sketch of mother and daughter. The performance's finest moments
occur when Walker, Nan and Pip revisit their misspent youths late
in the first act; the brisk writing fuels the chemistry among the
actors as they all hit their stride. Its weaker moments occur very
early and very late, and have more to do with the play than the
production. Monologues in the first act delay our entry into the
material and the final moments of the second act lack the intensity
of the first.
The choice of this play augurs well for theater in the Triangle.
Flying Machine Theater Company should be commended for recognizing
its challenge and its subtlety. Since opening night, I have returned
again and again to the idea of Janeway House. It is a suburban structure
conceived of by a man of the city. It is a house idealized by the
children of the architects who created it, even though it reneged
on the promise of the suburbs: It never sheltered or nurtured a
family. Architectural acclaim aside, the house's alternating solids
and voids represent the endowment that parents bestow upon their
children.
February 9, 2000
The eyes have it
By V. Cullum Rogers
Private Eyes, now playing at Manbites Dog Theater,
features an intelligent, witty script by Steven Dietz, excellent
acting and directing and a style that mixes raw emotion with unashamed
theatrical effects. In short, it would be a typical, top-flight
MDT production, if it weren't for one not-so-minor detail: The show
is actually being presented in the Dog's Other Voices Series by
Flying Machine Theatre Company, a Raleigh-based outfit that made
its debut last March with The Rainmaker.
The script of Private Eyes revolves around the classic triangle--husband,
wife and other man--all of whom work in the theater. Beyond that,
there's little that can be said about the plot without spoiling
the pleasure of seeing it unfold. Though it contains a lot of intense
emotion, Private Eyes is a comedy, and much of that comedy comes
from the audience's gradual realization that magician-playwright
Dietz is presenting a sleight-of-hand act, where appearance and
reality are often two different things. What keeps the play from
being just an exercise in clever frivolity is that the lady and
her husband really are being sawed in half.
That last fact is driven home by the excellent direction of Paul
Frellick, who shows no fear of strong emotions, and the performances
of J. Chachula and Jeri Lynn Schulke as the married couple. Both
are precise, highly skilled actors whose characters seem like real
people capable of being wounded to the core of their beings--which
makes both their acting and their "acting" all that more
moving and/or amusing. (If that last sentence doesn't make sense
to you, see the play and it'll get clearer.) Chachula, one of Flying
Machine's founders, has been familiar to local audiences for some
years, but Schulke has previously worked mostly within the UNC drama
department. If you haven't seen her before, do so now. You've got
a treat coming.
If the other actors make less of an impression, it's only because
they have less to work with. The third member of the triangle is
a figure straight out of 19th-century melodrama: cold, sarcastic,
manipulative and (to complete the cliché) British. Mark Filiaci
doesn't turn this Vile Seducer into a real person, but he does make
him a vivid cad. Derrick Ivey and Marta King ably handle a pair
of roles that, again, I can't say much about without spoiling plot
twists.
According to the program, the company's next show will be Paul
Parnell's The Rise and Rise of Daniel Rocket in
early June at the Longview Center in Raleigh. It's a play I know
nothing about, but I plan to be there. If Private Eyes is anything
to go by, Flying Machine is the strongest new group to hit the Triangle
theater scene since Burning Coal debuted three years ago.
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