Celia Weston and Lili Taylor
Will Broadway be receptive to a revival of “Marvin’s Room?” It
has its best shot with the largely subscription audience that comes with this fine
Roundabout Theatre Company production under the direction of Anne Kauffman. With
leading roles played by the equally outstanding Janeane Garofalo, Lili Taylor
and Celia Weston, the sad/funny play by Scott McPherson, with a plot dealing
with chronic physical disability, mental disorder, and the process of dying,
isn’t the downer you might expect.
It has been twenty-five years since I first saw this play at
Playwrights Horizons. It remains a touching consideration of all of the above.
The core of it is given to a remarkable pivotal character named Bessie (Lilly
Taylor) who reaffirms for us the value of unselfish giving and the blessing in
avoiding martyrdom. Although the play is principally about Bessie, a 40
year-old spinster who has devoted the better part of her adult life caring for
her terminally ill father (the title character) and his ailing sister, it also
revolves around an extended family circle forced to deal with physical and
emotional transitions.
Marvin, the totally paralyzed victim of strokes and advanced
cancer, is never seen but is revealed through a screen as an occasionally
shrieking shadow whenever his daughter Bessie and his aging and innocently
forgetful sister Ruth (splendid work by Celia Weston) make their regularly scheduled
administering visits, often entertaining him with a display of lights that
appear to bounce off the wall.
Things don’t improve when an over-tired Bessie is diagnosed
with Leukemia in an unexpectedly funny scene at a medical clinic presided over by
a flaky and flagrantly incompetent doctor (Triney Sandoval.) Bessie turns for
help to her estranged, unmarried, cosmetology-trained sister Lee (a terrific Janeane
Garofalo), a noticeably bi-polar woman saddled with two even more emotionally troubled
sons, one a teenager under treatment at a mental institution for burning down
his home.
Lee makes the trek from Ohio to Florida accompanied by Hank
(Jack DeFalco) who has just been conditionally released in her care and Charlie
(Luca Padovan), a severely myopic introvert who faces life head down in a book.
Splendid work from both DeFalco and Padovan. The joy and the power of the play comes
from watching Bessie neutralize the negative energy around her and triumph over
the neurotic self-centeredness of her support group. On close inspection, McPherson’s
play delivers a defiantly positive prognoses.
Neither depressing nor altogether absurdist with its
assertively comical tract, “Marvin’s Room” welcomes the gently empowering lift it
gets from Kauffman’s unforced direction and from a cast that doesn’t miss a
heartbeat of the play’s inherent poignancy or the compulsively funny sick room
jokes.
Taylor, who doesn’t appear often enough on Broadway or Off-B’way,
is wonderful as a pathetic figure of stooped and scrawny resignation. She
somehow grows beautiful before our eyes as she is forced to summon up hidden
resources of strength dealing with her self-absorbed sister, the troubled sons,
the aunt whose brain has been wired to alleviate the pain in her back, her
father and, of course, her own mortality. Designer Laura Jellinek’s modernist
revolving setting gets us from one emotionally cathartic scene to next.
“Marvin’s Room”
Roundabout's
American Airlines Theatre 227 West 42nd Street
Tuesday through Saturday evening at 8:00PM with Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00PM.
Tuesday through Saturday evening at 8:00PM with Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00PM.
Reviewed by Simon
Saltzman on 07/07/17
From 6/08/17; opening 6/29/17; closing 8/27/17
From 6/08/17; opening 6/29/17; closing 8/27/17
No comments:
Post a Comment