Bloody hell! No, that’s not an
expletive, it’s a description of Martin McDonagh’s play "The Lieutenant of
Inishmore," now messing up the stage of the Mark Taper Forum. A bizarre
black farce about the deadly “Troubles” in Northern Ireland---how’s that
for an oxymoron!---"The Lieutenant of Inishmore" can best be described as
“yucky.” Yuck as in big laughs, and Yuck! as in “Eeeeeew, that’s so
disgusting!”
It all begins with a dead black
cat. Not only dead, but decapitated. The cat, Wee Thomas, is the cherished
pet of the renegade terrorist Padraic---pronounced Poric--- (Chris Pine),
who is first seen torturing a man who is shackled at the ankles and
hanging upside down. Padraic is a member of the INLA, the Irish National
Liberation Army, an excessively violent group of psychopaths best known
for bombings, kidnappings, and drug dealing. Interrupted by a phone call
from his dad, Donny, (Sean C. Griffin), Padraic takes off for home to
nurse Wee Thomas, who he has been told is “doing poorly.”
Meanwhile, Donny and his young
helper Davey (Coby Getzug) are busy covering an orange cat with black shoe
polish in order to persuade Padraic that Wee Thomas is still alive.
When Padraic finally arrives
home, the plot thickens. Or, rather, clots. He is confronted by three
gun-toting thugs from a different renegade group who want to kill him. And
here you need to refer to the play’s program notes, which provide a brief
history of the IRA (Irish Republican Army) and its constantly evolving
splinter groups, with acronyms such as PIRA, OIRA, INLA, IRSP and PLA.
(Don’t ask!)
There is also a love interest:
Mairead (Zoe Perry) a young girl who looks like a boy (short hair, no
boobs) and spends her days shooting cows in the eyes as a protest against
butchers who charge too much. She believes she can put the butchers out of
business because “who would want to buy meat off a blind cow?”
"The Lieutenant of Inishmore"
continues as a mock Shakespearean drama until most of the characters are
dead and the stage is awash in a river of blood. Literally. And as those
still alive slosh around in it, you wonder what keeps them from skidding
across the stage and landing in the third row.
Set designer Laura Fine Hawkes
has provided a cozy Irish home as well as an outdoor setting of artfully
stacked gray planks and Stephanie Kerley Schwartz has costumed the cast in
suitably nondescript and timeless outfits. Cricket S. Myers is the sound
designer and Matt McKenzie has provided original music, but the
overwhelming---and fabulous---sound is of tattooing drums, raising the
roof between scenes.
"The Lieutenant of Inishmore" is
a guilty pleasure. You can’t believe you’re laughing at it even while
you’re shuddering at all the blood and gore. Perhaps the laughs come as a
result of the tight direction of Wilson Milam, who keeps the ensemble to
its impeccable timing---hysteria moderated by long Pinteresque pauses.
Milam has directed this production since its first performance by the
Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford-upon-Avon in 2001 and its
subsequent performances in New York.
Playwright Martin McDonagh has
won Tony nominations for "The Beauty Queen of Leenane," "The Lonesome
West," "The Plowman," and this play, "The Lieutenant of Inishmore." He has
also been nominated for an Oscar (and won the British Academy of Film and
Television Arts, or BAFTA award) for his screenplay "In Bruges." His next
film, he has said, will be one called "Seven Psychopaths." We can hardly
wait!
"The Lieutenant of Inishmore"
will continue at the Mark Taper Forum, 135 N. Grand Ave., in Los Angeles,
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 1 and 6:30 p.m. through August 8th. Call (213) 628-2772 for
tickets.
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