230.
PHILOSOPHY FOR GANGSTERS
Because
of construction on the A train tracks I was forced to take a shuttle bus
between Utica Avenue and Jay Street-Metrotech on Saturday afternoon, thereby
adding 45 minutes to my usual 40-minute trip to Times Square. I arrived at the
Beckett Theatre on Theatre Row at 2:16, around 6 minutes after the play,
PHILOSOPHY FOR GANGSTERS, had started, feeling horrible for being late (only the
second time among the 500 or so shows I’ve seen since June 2012), although
relieved I had no guest waiting for me to arrive. Once I was admitted to the
half-filled theatre I took any empty seat I wished, and within minutes began
wishing I’d come later.
From left: Kyle Robert Carter, David Demato, Tom White. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
The oddball effort is by a pair of
Australian writers and directors, Liz and Barry Peak, a daughter-father team who
are clearly intelligent people with an interestingly skewed sense of humor, and
a good idea on which to premise their play; unfortunately, they have little
sense of how far out to go on their satirical limb before it breaks. When this somewhat
surrealistic, excessively episodic, darkly farcical tribute to THE GODFATHER
and “The Sopranos” ended, after an overlong two hours and 15 minutes of
agonizingly unfunny violence and philosophizing (yes, philosophizing) amid
rival crews of New Jersey Mafiosi and black drug dealers, I felt like one of
the victims of the play’s reprehensible hoodlums, riddled not by bullets but by
bad jokes, unconvincing acting, and a nonsensical plot.
Courtney Romano, Bruno Iannone. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Here’s a rough idea of what
transpires. The word “philosophy” in the title, as I’ve hinted, is actually
germane to this tale of pseudo-intellectual Italian-American hoodlums under the influence of Callie (Courtney Romano), the Ivy League-educated, black
leather-jacketed, skin-tight jeans, and stiletto-heeled Mafia daughter whose family
of goons was recently killed by the cops. The gang decides that the root cause of the
world’s problems is the philosophy of determinism, which holds that everything
that happens is based on predetermined outcomes, with free will (or choice)
playing no role. This prompts these honor-bound thugs to take vengeance on philosophers who advocate this position. Callie and her fellow black
leather-jacked henchmen, the trigger-happy Eddie (David Demato) and
the urbane, knowledgeable Luther (Tally Sessions), who totes around a huge
set of lock clippers, pick at random a meek young New Jersey college professor
named Wilford May (Tom White); after Luther snips off Wilford’s pinky, they make
him their prisoner, keeping him bound and gagged in a plastic trash bin. Callie
and her crew are simultaneously doing the same with a black drug dealer (Kyle
Robert Carter), whom they casually torture by pumping his stomach. The play is
filled with such supposedly hilarious random violence, and people get whacked willy-nilly
before our eyes, with nary a sign of regret or compassion. Presumably, these
actions all demonstrate the mob’s belief in free will. All of this is expressed through stereotypical hip-hot attitudes for the black gangstas and similarly broad gestures and accents by the Mafia
gangsters.
The crazier the plot gets,
the harder it is to sit through; it includes a drug war between the local
crime boss, the Don (Bruno Iannone) and the bling-wearing black gangstas X-Dogg
(Mr. Carter) and A-Dogg (Shabazz Green); the conversion of the professor into a
radical revolutionary who will help them rob a bank (remember Patty Hearst?)
and who's credited with carrying out mass murders he didn’t actually commit;
the implication that the media are responsible for turning miscreants into popular
heroes (à la Che Guevera); a growing attraction between the protesting professor and
the callous Callie; and many other too-silly-to-swallow developments made even more difficult to accept because of the many exaggerated performances and thudding direction.
Courtney Romano, Tom White. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Central
to the play’s development is the idea that the two rival gangs attempt to
battle out their differences via a philosophical debate between Willie May and
a black philosopher named Mfume (Leajato Amata Robinson), who wears pink
eyeglass frames and a pink tie, and who calls his philosophical platform “ethnocentric
relativism.” (We learn as well that
philosophy has become so hot that the Latino hoodlums now have their own
philosopher and that TV shows with titles like “Nietzsche Knows” are now
trending well.)
Julia Noulin-Mérat’s unappealing set
provides a brick-covered false proscenium, with wood-paneled sliding doors that
serve as a kind of curtain. The main acting area is divided into two spaces,
the one at stage right a paneled room used for differing locations, the one at
stage left a seedy room where Callie and her gang carry out their nefarious
duties. Overhead is a projection screen on which are shown not only scenes of
different exterior locales and other still images, but which also serves for
videos of surveillance tapes, TV newscasts about the crimes being perpetrated,
interviews with various citizens about the events transpiring, and even a
dialogue scene between a character on stage and (in prerecorded video) the
person he’s talking to.
Much of this play concerns our
ability to make choices. Unless you’re a determinist, you’ll make up your own mind
about whether to visit PHILOSOPHY FOR GANGSTERS. My advice is to stay home or
see something else. The choice is yours. Or not.