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Executive Artistic Director
David Alford |
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By MARTIN BRADY
As much as Nashvillians love canines, it's no wonder they'd take
to A.R. Gurney's Sylvia
When it comes to pet activism, Nashville may well be second to no other
American city. There are legions of ardent animal rescuers in our town,
and stories of animal abuse can easily dominate the headlines here. We
even have public debates about whether dogs should be allowed in certain
parks.
What does any of this have to do with the theater arts? It all serves
as an attempt to understand why two major local theater companies have
chosen to present A.R. Gurney's Sylvia within five months of each
other. Boiler Room Theatre in Franklin staged a competent production back
in June, and Tennessee Rep opened its version last week.
Playwright Gurney, now 74, has had a successful career focusing mostly
on American middle-class issues, in particular love and family. His plays
are typically infused with a wry hopefulness and characterized by fanciful,
creative set-ups. With his Williams College/Yale School of Drama pedigree,
Gurney easily could have chosen to enter the ranks of more serious dramatists.
Instead, he's a theatrical populist, best known for the somewhat schmaltzy
Love Letters.
In Sylvia, a middle-aged man brings home a stray dog who essentially
fills the void in his midlife crisis. Gurney's whimsy finds full expression
in the foundling pooch, who can talk (even swear like a sailor) and holds
strong opinions about her master, Greg, and his wife, Kate, Manhattan
empty-nesters whose marriage is in transition.
Greg is having "a male menopausal moment," says Kate, who isn't
happy about the interloper in their lives. If he were another kind of
man, goodhearted Greg might've taken a mistress, but clearly Sylvia will
do. When he returns from the dog groomer, his new "girlfriend"
outfitted pretty in pink, Kate perceives serious trouble ahead. "He
thinks I shit ice cream," Sylvia comments to Kate, and indeed the
struggle for Greg's affection is afoot.
Director Mark Cabus' cast is generally up to the task of pulling off this
thoughtful, often humorous entertainment. Boiler Room's earlier mounting
lacked some of the sophistication that this new rendition captures, with
Gary Hoff's colorful Upper East Side apartment set helping mightily to
create the proper atmosphere. This version also gives us all of the title
character's expletive-laced dialogue, which heightens the adult feel while
adding some off-color laughs.
Nevertheless, with all its professional gloss, this effort has some problems.
Jennifer Jewell, a genuinely talented actress, takes on the play's toughest
role, that of Kate, who finds herself pitted against a talking dog who
is already an instant audience favorite. Jewell's casting is superficially
spot-on, but she seems chronically world-weary, when she should be more
energized, ready to combat the new "woman" in her husband's
life. Jewell's portrayal creates a static dynamic among the three main
characters, which in turn is compounded by Cabus' merely adequate staging.
The direction here is realistic enough, and bodies move around with logic,
yet patches of dullness reflect a lack of any obvious comic impulse that
might've further exploited the play's inherently absurd premise.
The directorial issues take center stage with the role of Sylvia. As the
precocious pup, Jenny Littleton evokes chuckles, though that may have
more to do with Gurney's writing than it does with her characterization.
Littleton's as flighty and unpredictable as a stray dog might be in new
surroundings, but she's too reserved in her portrayal of a city-wise Noo
Yawk canine. She delivers sarcasm with her intelligent readingsno
surprise, since Littleton is a demonstrably fine dramatic actress. But
whether she's establishing her controversial presence in her adopted home,
reacting aggressively to a house cat or scouting out potential sex partners
during a walk through the park, Littleton's Sylvia would have benefited
from a determinedly brassier sense of chutzpah. This is a gentler Sylvia
than Lauri Bright gave us at Boiler Room months back, and it's not quite
as vivid, nor as funny.
Richard McWilliams, making his Rep debut, is a fine Greg, lost in laid-back,
dreamy-eyed idealism and effectively pondering his 40-something need for
connection. In the enviable position of getting to tackle three different,
instantly funny, multi-sexual roles is Bobby Wyckoff, who successfully
portrays Tom, a smart-ass dog-walker in Central Park; Phyllis, a befuddled
family friend; and an androgynous marital therapist, Leslie. Wyckoff plays
the humor as broadly as necessary, but knows when to pull back subtly.
His well-tempered performance keeps the play lively at key points when
the rhythm threatens to falter.
Overall, I'd recommend Sylvia, and if the good-sized crowds that
attended even the show's preview performances are any indication, the
marriage between Nashville dog-lovers and this primarily lighthearted
drama should make for a happy and successful union. Clearly, there are
enough people in the audience who identify with Greg and are willing to
overlook the Rep production's admittedly forgivable missteps.
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