By Richard Pacheco
“Eleemosynary”
is a 1985 one act play by Lee Blessing (Best known for “A Walk in the Woods”.
It follows the relationships between three generations of women at the
Downstage Theatre for 2nd Story and it sparkles with fine
performances and vibrant energy, full of sass and fun as it investigates the
relationships between a grandmother, mother and daughter, fraught with
intricacies and peculiarities.. The word "eleemosynary" itself plays
a significant part in the plot.
The stage
is nearly bare with ramps criss-crossing, some shelves and books, highly
evocative along with some large wooden frames for wings a la Da Vinci’s flying
machine. Words, not jus their spelling, but their definitions play an important
part in this play. They interplay with the relationship between the three
women, delving into its complexities and convolutions. The relationships
between the three women are subtle and at times contrary and perverse. The
grandmother, Dorothea, is a genuine eccentric, a woman disappointed by much of
her life until she discovers she can be eccentric and it offers her a saving
grace, but one with impact and consequences for her family. Her daughter
Artemis (Artie) shirks from her mother’s strong personality and quirky ways.
Her mother is dominating and overbearing and she flees from her influence,
running away from home as a child multiple times. Artie’s daughter, Echo, is
bright, talented and precocious with a love of words, instilled in her by her
grandmother to the point of obsession from childhood on. Artie leaves her
daughter in her mother’s care, feeling cut of by the bond between the two. As
the play begins, Dorothea has suffered a stroke, and while Echo has
reestablished contact with her mother, it is only through extended telephone
conversations, during which real issues are skirted and their talk is mostly
about the precocious Echo’s single-minded domination of a national spelling
contest.
Isabel
O’Donnell is the eccentric and quirky Dorothea. Dorothea loves learning, loves,
if not is downright obsessed about getting children to learn words, both
meanings and spelling. Dorothea’s father dashed her dreams of attending college
and pushed her into an unwanted marriage. Trapped in that, her mind turns
increasingly flighty and cold towards her daughter. O’Donnell is a delight in
the role, full of poise, prescience and oozing eccentricity with ease and
finesse.
Sharon
Carpentier is Artemis, an intelligent woman nearly snuffed by her mother’s
oppressiveness and overbearing manner. She latches on to scientific rationalism
in self defense. Her mother squeezes her out of her daughter’s life piece by
piece and she admits to emotional child abuse and moves to eight different
cities to escape her mother and is always ready to move to another one.
Carpentier handles the role of the resentful perpetually escaping Artie with
skill and energy. It is difficult to evoke compassion for the character, but
Carpenier does so ably and admirably.
Valerie
Westgate is Echo, the spelling genius who tires to get her mother and
grandmother back on better terms and is willing to use her spelling abilities
to entice them to the same place at the same time for her spelling bee. She
also knows all about derivations and the earliest literary uses of all manner
of arcane words. She is precocious to the border of irritating. Echo is bound
and determined to somehow bring her grandmother and mother somehow together
again no matter what. Westgate is charming in the role, managing to balance
exuberance with a smart aleck arrogance that does not get to be overbearing.
Director
Mark Peckham keeps the pace rapid and on target. He deftly balances the wants
and desires of the three women with a keen eye on pace and their unique
relationships.
Words play
a key element in this play, words and their ability to alter and control life,
to redefine relationships and interactions on so many levels. It offers some
dazzling moments for Echo with her spelling and some terrific interplay between
the women.
“Eleemosynary” (20 October - 23
November)
@ 28
Market Street, WARREN
RI
1(401)247 4200
No comments:
Post a Comment