Once
again, Steppenwolf succeeds in
another production of
The Glass
Menagerie for its
Theatre for Young Adults
series. The performances in
this annual series are great
introductions to theatre,
regardless of age. While youth
appropriate, they are not
watered down. They remain
sufficiently meaty for adult
viewers, new or experienced.
Steppenwolf brings us its take
on this Tennessee Williams
classic story of a family
enduring financial crisis, loss
and absence. Mother Amanda
Wingfield pines for her glorious
Southern past and longs for the
better life that might have been
had her husband not left them
years ago. The past is just as
much a character as any
individual as Wingfield's
memories and Mr. Wingfield's
absence remains a potent,
constant force in the lives of
Amanda, son Tom and daughter
Laura.
Steppenwolf's version was fresh,
powerful and unique. James T.
Alfred commands as central
character and narrator Tom
constantly conveying Tom's
tortured nature as he wrestles
between his duty to himself and
to his family, who rely on him
for financial support. Tom's
crime is dreaming and desiring a
fulfilled life beyond the
constrictive, claustrophobic
barriers of the family's
apartment.
Shenesia Davis brings us a rare,
very physical portrayal of
Amanda that also shows her
vulnerability. Amanda is as
irritating, domineering and
loquacious as ever but Davis
also tenderly portrays Amanda's
deep pain from a life that has
gone so incredibly,
unpredictably off track. "[T]he
future becomes the present, the
present the past, and the past
turns into everlasting regret if
you don't plan for it" is
Amanda's motivating principle.
Amanda, however misguided,
deeply loves her children, and
tries mightily to plan for their
futures, especially for
crippled, painfully shy
daughter, Laura. Nambi Kelley
succeeds at bringing us a Laura
that is simultaneously frail and
fragile but with an inner
strength generally not
portrayed. Anthony Fleming's
charisma as gentleman caller Jim
conveys the strengths that made
Jim a big man on campus in high
school as well as his weaknesses
which explain why his star has
fallen since his glory high
school days.
Steppenwolf brings a twist to
"The Glass Menagerie" with an
all Black cast. Unfortunately,
Steppenwolf wasted an
opportunity to present this tale
from an African American
perspective. Steppenwolf simply
replaced a White cast with a
Black one, without adjusting the
story to reflect the lives of
Black people in the
post-Depression 1940s of St.
Louis. Steppenwolf's failure to
revise the storyline begs the
question - why have a Black
cast? Why actively promote the
play as having an all Black cast
if the story is not adjusted to
reflect the reality of Black
people? It was jarring, and
well as inaccurate, to hear
Amanda discuss her membership in
the Daughters of the American
Revolution or regret Tom's
decision not to attend
Washington University. In the
1940s, both were impossible. The
play includes some other
similarly impossible scenarios.
It
is patently false that the
stories of Black people are not
universal. The decision not to
revise the play gives credence
to this false notion. It was
quite possible to revise this
story of family, memory and
desire in a manner that kept it
true to the experiences of Black
people in 1940s St. Louis,
significant to a range of
viewers and true to the thrust
of Williams' story. I would
have preferred Steppenwolf to
make the casting of an all Black
cast relevant. Instead,
Steppenwolf's choice requires us
to view them as White people.
In the
post-show discussion, one of the
producers commented that only
the adult viewers discern the
play's historical inaccuracies.
Our young people's failure to
recognize the incongruence
between the play's language and
the reality of Black people is
not a legitimate defense for the
play not addressing these
inconsistencies. If anything,
since the play is targeted to
young people, the play ought to
be edifying and accurate.
Unfortunately, our young
people's inability to pick up on
these historical inaccuracies is
another indictment on the
failure to educate young people
in basic history.
Theatre
for Young People is designed to
entice new audiences to theatre,
especially people of color in a
world of increasing ethnic
diversity. It seems more
important then for the play to
acknowledge and affirm the
experiences of Black people,
rather than ignore them.
- Lauren
Comments? E-mail me at:
Lauren@so-LAZE.com
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