As a passionate piece of 20th century history, it works. As a
parable for the present day, not so much.
Clifford Odets’ 1935 Depression-era play Waiting for Lefty is a
rabble-rousing tirade against big business and its heavy-handed control of
the “downtrodden masses.” A situation that might resonate with
Americans today, except for the out-of-date solution Odets offers:
Russian-style socialism.
Nevertheless, Director Charlie Mount has assembled a truly committed and
convincing ensemble---extraordinary actors, every one of them. They
represent a branch of the taxi drivers’ union, shouting their stories from
the stage and from the audience. And the stories themselves are,
sadly, relevant today.
A young couple (Heather Alyse Becker and Adam Conger) can’t afford to get
married. A charity patient dies during routine surgery. A man
(Paul Gunning) is verbally attacked by his wife (Kristin Wiegand) for not
standing up to his bosses. (”You are stalled like a flivver in the
snow,” she tells him.) A doctor with seniority (Elizabeth Bradshaw)
is “down-sized” because she is a woman and a Jew. “You don’t believe
a theory until it happens to you,” she says. And another man (Jason
Galloway) is rudely turned away when applying for a job. He is
comforted by a secretary (Sandra Tucker) who offers him a book that she
suggests will help him. It is Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’
Communist Manifesto.
The vignettes are gripping and filled with pathos and elicit an emotional
response from the audience. As does Anthony Gruppuso, who plays
Harry Fatt, the representative from Management. If anyone can steal
this excellent show, Gruppuso does. He is a fireball, charging all
over the stage, one moment cajoling, another shouting disputations,
getting into a fistfight, and holding back the union’s decision to strike.
He is everywhere at once, and if the audience had been provided with eggs,
he’s the one they would have bombarded.
In another telling vignette, a worker in a chemical plant (Donald Moore)
is offered a huge pay raise by his boss (Roger Cruz) to spy on a fellow
scientist who is working on poison gas. True to Odets’ socialist
philosophy about the goodness of “the common man,” the compromised worker
refuses, even though it means he will lose his job.
Capitalism, the clash between the various classes, and the ever-present
bigotry against immigrants and other outsiders, is what the play is all
about. It was a dark time, the ‘30s, when up to 25% of the American
work force was out of work. Almost makes the current recession, with
just under 10% out of work, look easy. But unfortunately, the roots
are pretty much the same.
And I think that’s the point Director Mount is trying to make.
He does this on a nearly empty stage and with a few wooden chairs put
together by Set Designer Jeff Rack. And skuzzy outfits, including
scuffed and battered shoes, as well as dramatic lighting designed by
Yancey Dunham.
Just about the only things that don’t work well are the great billows of
mist that are extruded periodically onto the stage in an attempt to
simulate a “smoke-filled” union hall. Since nobody on stage is ever
seen smoking, the mist sort of misses the point.
But this is a small nitpick in a classic play about a time that older
viewers will remember ruefully and younger people will learn about with
astonishment and, perhaps, incredulity.
Waiting for Lefty will continue Fridays and Saturdays 8 p.m. and Sundays
at 2 through October 10, 2010 at Theatre West, 3333 Cahuenga Blvd. West,
in Los Angeles. Call (323) 851-7977 for tickets.
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