47. THE
UNAVOIDABLE DISAPPEARANCE OF TOM DURNIN
As
I headed down the steps to the F train at 47th Street and Sixth
Avenue last night, so did David Morse, the star of THE UNAVOIDABLE
DISAPPEARANCE OF TOM DURNIN, which I’d just seen in the Roundabout Theatre
production at the Laura Pels Theatre on 46th. Often, I will fudge when I meet an actor this
way right after a performance (when you go as often as I, it’s not an uncommon
experience) and say something complimentary regardless of what I really
thought, just to be polite, but in Morse’s case I was totally sincere in
offering my congratulations on a truly excellent job. He thanked me and said it
isn’t easy playing someone everyone hates and, before he went uptown and I
down, we chatted briefly about how difficult a job he has in bringing sympathy
to the Bernie Madoff-inspired character he plays.
The Laura Pels Theatre.
THE UNAVOIDABLE DISAPPEARANCE . . .,
by Steven Levenson, who wrote the fine office politics play, CORE VALUES, seen
earlier in the season, is lucky to have Mr. Morse in its leading role, as the
writing is decidedly uneven and a couple of the performances are equally shaky.
Although there are vast differences between the play’s story and that of Mr.
Madoff, the similarities are close enough so that few spectators will miss the
connection.
A middle-aged man, Tom Durnin (Mr. Morse), shows up at
the small and shabby exurban home of his 23-year-old son, James (Christopher
Denham), who makes his scanty living as a stethoscope salesman. Tom, formerly a
star lawyer, has just been released after five and a half years in prison, where
he was sent after being convicted of cheating friends and relatives out of all
their money by getting them to invest in a fraudulent company. Now, insisting
he’s paid his debt, he
tries to win back his children and his divorced wife, Karen (an excellent Lisa
Emery). James, disgusted with and ashamed of his father, whose crime forced him
to drop out of Yale, resists having anything to do with him, although he allows
him to crash at his home for a month while Tom, who works as a barista at a
nearby Borders (the play is set in 2009), finds his footing. Tom also tries to get
back into his former firm by pressuring his son-in-law, Chris (well played by
Rich Sommer, of MAD MEN), with a possibly trumped-up blackmail threat. A
subplot involves a budding romance between James and a flaky young woman, Katie
(Sarah Goldberg), he meets in a community college writing course, which he
hopes will help him become a novelist.
The driving force in all of this is
Tom’s determined effort to convince his ruptured family to forgive him, despite
what he keeps insisting was his “mistake.” He uses all the manipulative
intellectual and emotional ploys that made him a success, but the pain he has
caused his loved ones proves a gigantic obstacle for even a man of his
abilities. Mr. Morse’s behavior is so rooted in the moment, so grounded in desperation,
that you are tempted momentarily to want him to find forgiveness, until you
realize how much you are as much a victim of his wiles as any of the characters
in the play. The play explores not only his propensity for lying, but that of
James, whose mendacity is of another order but nevertheless has the power to
inflict deep pain on loved ones.
Mr. Levenson’s play, despite its
having several powerful scenes, keeps hitting wrong notes. Why is it necessary,
for example, to have both the highly intelligent Tom and Karen fail to correct a
simple error despite their being corrected by James? Tom keeps saying Snoopy
Dog, no matter how often James says it’s Snoop Dog, and Karen insists on noting
that James sells catheters regardless of James’s telling her it’s stethoscopes.
The subplot about James and Katie is forced and inorganic, and seems like
stuffing needed to fill out an hour and a half of intermissionless stage time.
James and Katie read some of their writing to their class, and, while her
sample is clearly inadequate, his is pretty bad as well, although he’s
considered the class’s star pupil. What he reads takes place in the Ukraine,
where he’s never been, but he finally learns the lesson that you must write
about what you know; thus the play ends with a coda in which he reads a passage
that reflects his own experience and that comments on what he’s just gone
through. As he stands there in an amber spotlight, not unlike Tom at the end of
THE GLASS MENAGERIE, this previously clueless writer has magically morphed into
a budding literary talent.
Scott Ellis’s direction does what it
can with this sometimes unconvincing material. Beowulf Boritt’s set, which uses a turntable at stage
left to show both James and Karen’s residences, with a grassy lawn at stage
right for the scenes outside the writing class, provides an adequate physical
environment, supported by Donald Holder’s lighting and Jeff Mahsie’s everyday
costumes.
Christopher Denham’s James and Sarah Goldberg’s Katie
offer the weakest performances, both of them finding a single note on which they
keep harping. Hers is a sing-song, girlish intonation, with mannered readings that
reflect a type of vacuous young woman who appears too often in contemporary
plays, TV, and films. His is a whiny, eyes-down, self-pitying depression that
persists long after the point of his disaffection has been made.
But this is a play about Tom Durnin and his embodiment
in the outstanding acting of David Morse. To return to what Mr. Morse said when
we met in the subway, playing someone everyone hates isn’t easy. The same could
be said for watching THE UNAVOIDABLE DISAPPEARANCE OF TOM DURNIN, a play about
someone everyone hates.