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August: Osage
County
by Tracy Letts
The play is
in three acts and runs for about 3 hours 20 minutes including intermissions.
During this time, August: Osage County deals with such issues as:
drug abuse, alcoholism, suicide, death, family dysfunction, sexual
harassment, aging, generational change, racism, incest, infidelity,
and ultimately love. Love in a family, love between two people,
and love lost.
It won the
2007-2008 New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Play, and
was named the best play of 2007 by both Time Magazine and Entertainment
Weekly. On May 13, 2008, the show received 7 Tony Award nominations,
more than any other play that year.
Directed by
Anna D. Shapiro; sets by Todd Rosenthal; costumes by Ana Kuzmanic;
lighting by Ann G. Wrightson; sound by Richard Woodbury; music by
David Singer; dramaturg, Edward Sobel
Cast: Ian Barford
(Little Charles), Deanna Dunagan (Violet Weston), Kimberly Guerrero
(Johnna Monevata), Francis Guinan (Charlie Aiken), Brian
Kerwin (Steve Heidebrecht), Dennis Letts (Beverly Weston),
Madeleine Martin (Jean Fordham), Mariann Mayberry (Karen Weston),
Amy Morton (Barbara Fordham), Sally Murphy (Ivy Weston), Jeff Perry
(Bill Fordham), Rondi Reed (Mattie Fae Aiken) and Troy West (Sheriff
Deon Gilbeau).
New
York Times
December 5, 2007
Mama
Doesnt Feel Well, but Everyone Else Will Feel Much Worse
By Charles Isherwood
All happy families are alike, Tolstoy told us, and each unhappy
family is unhappy in its own way. But Id bet the farm that
no family has ever been as unhappy in as many ways and to
such sensationally entertaining effect as the Westons of
August: Osage County, the new play by Tracy Letts that
blazed open last night at the Imperial Theater.
A fraught, densely
plotted saga of an Oklahoma clan in a state of near-apocalyptic
meltdown, August is probably the most exciting new American
play Broadway has seen in years. Oh, forget probably: It is, flat-out,
no asterisks and without qualifications, the most exciting new American
play Broadway has seen in years. Fiercely funny and bitingly sad,
this turbo-charged tragicomedy which spans three acts and
more than three blissful hours doesnt just jump-start
the fall theater season, recently stalled when the stagehands went
on strike. August throws it instantaneously into high
gear.
Mr. Letts, hitherto
best known as the author of the crafty, blood-soaked genre pieces
Killer Joe and Bug, somehow finds fresh
sources of insight, humor and anguish in seemingly worn-to-the-stump
material: the dysfunctional dynamics of the American family. In
August: Osage County can be heard echoes of other classic
dramas about the strangling grip of blood ties from Eugene
ONeills Long Days Journey Into Night
to Sam Shepards Buried Child but Mr. Letts
infuses his dark drama with potent energies derived from two more
populist forms of American entertainment. The play has the zip and
zingy humor of classic television situation comedy and the absorbing
narrative propulsion of a juicy soap opera, too.
In other words,
this isnt theater-thats-good-for-you theater. (Not that
theres anything wrong with that, to quote an immortal line
from a beloved sitcom.) Its theater that continually keeps
you hooked with shocks, surprises and delights, although it has
a moving, heart-sore core. Watching it is like sitting at home on
a rainy night, greedily devouring two, three, four episodes of your
favorite series in a row on DVR or DVD. You will leave the Imperial
Theater emotionally wrung out and exhausted from laughing, but you
may still find yourself hungry for more.
August
was first staged over the summer at the Steppenwolf Theater Company
in Chicago. That production, with a terrific cast superbly directed
by Anna D. Shapiro, has been imported virtually wholesale for the
Broadway run. Among the many pleasures the show affords is the chance
to see actors largely unknown in New York perhaps, most vitally,
Deanna Dunagan, who plays an evil mom to end them all take
the city by storm with the harsh humor, ferocity and keen feeling
of their performances.
Ms. Dunagan
is Violet Weston, the razor-tongued matriarch of a family from Pawhuska,
near Tulsa. Early on in the play, Violets husband of more
than 30 years, a poet and former professor, mysteriously
or perhaps not so mysteriously walks off into a sultry summer
night, never to be heard from again. (The exhausted paterfamilias,
Beverly, played with lovely wit and rue by the playwrights
father, Dennis Letts, opens the play with a lyrical dirge assessing
the state of his marriage: My wife takes pills, and I drink,
he says. Thats the bargain weve struck.)
The couples
three adult daughters are called back to the family homestead, husbands
or boyfriends in tow, to comfort Mother in her time of need, and
try to get to the bottom of Dads disappearance. (Todd Rosenthal
designed the tiered, haunted-house set, artfully strewn with shadows
by the lighting designer Ann G. Wrightson.) All three offspring
exhibit clear indications of past, present or future emotional damage.
The mousy Ivy
(Sally Murphy), who lives nearby and resents the responsibility
shes had to take for watching over the horror of her parents
latter years, has never married, although she is secretly carrying
on a love affair with her mousy first cousin, belittlingly known
to the family as Little Charles (Ian Barford). Barbara (Amy Morton),
the oldest and strongest of the daughters, well armored in savage
humor, returns from Colorado with her newly estranged husband, Bill
Fordham (Jeff Perry), and their sardonic, pot-smoking teenage daughter,
Jean (Madeleine Martin). The youngest Weston girl, Karen (Mariann
Mayberry), arrives later, from Florida, spouting self-help platitudes
about her recently rehabilitated love life, and accompanied by her
oily businessman fiancé, Steve (Brian Kerwin).
Surrounded though
Violet is by her extended family which also includes her
abrasive sister, Mattie Fae (a howlingly funny Rondi Reed), and
Mattie Faes henpecked husband, Charlie (Francis Guinan)
she does not really seem to be a woman in great need of succor and
support. Yes, shes got cancer of the mouth. And a serious
addiction to downers. She is often self-medicated to the point of
incoherence, and prone to childish hysterics when crossed.
But Violet also
possesses a spirit of aggression that a pro linebacker would envy,
and a sixth sense for finding and exploiting the sore spots and
secret hurts of everyone around her. For Violet, a child of poverty,
neglect and abuse, the will to endure is inextricably tied up with
the desire to fight and the need to wound. She can keep the blood
in her own veins flowing only by drawing blood from others. (The
play could almost be called My Mother the Vampire.)
And so, needlessly,
pointlessly and endlessly, Violet sets about psychologically flaying
her nearest and dearest, one by one, taking impotent revenge for
the miseries of her life by picking at the scabs of everyone elses.
The results
are as harrowing as they are hilarious. Ms. Dunagan is simply magnificent
in this fabulously meaty role. Such is the mesmerizing power of
her performance that as Violets snake eyes scan the horizon
for a fresh victim, claw-hand dragging a Winston to her grimly set
mouth, you may actually find yourself sinking in your seat, irrationally
praying that she doesnt pick on you. (I was cowering myself.)
The
cast does not have a weak link, and the other major female roles,
in particular, are rewarding and perfectly played. (Only Ms. Martin
and Mr. Kerwin, both excellent, are new to the production.) Ms.
Murphys sad-eyed Ivy has a plaintive tenderness that occasionally
flares up into a defensive assertion of the justice of her needs.
Ms. Mayberry makes Karens drawly, long-winded narcissism oddly
touching you sense shes still recovering from a lifetime
of being talked over or ignored.
Ms. Reed flaps
and squawks hilariously as the vulgar Mattie Fae, who shares with
her sister a brazen heedlessness of other peoples feelings.
Perhaps finest of all is Ms. Mortons Barbara, who gradually
and frightfully begins to metamorphose before our
eyes into a boozing, brutalizing mirror image of her mother.
Alcoholism,
drug addiction, adultery, sexual misbehavior: The list of pathologies
afflicting one or another of the Weston family is seemingly endless,
and in some ways wearily familiar. But Mr. Lettss antic recombination
of soapy staples is so pop-artfully orchestrated that you never
see the next curveball coming, and the play is so quotably funny
Id have a hard time winnowing favorite lines to a dozen. (Much
of the Greatest Generation speech would definitely make
the list.)
Ill leave
you with one that neatly expresses the bleak spirit of the play,
which nevertheless manages to provide great pleasure by delving
into deep wells of cruelty and pain. Recalling a night of youthful
high spirits in sad contrast to the gruesome present, Barbara seeks
to wise up her daughter to the decay of hope and happiness that
often comes with the passage of time.
Thank
God we cant tell the future, she observes, or
wed never get out of bed.
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