30. WHEN
WE WERE YOUNG AND UNAFRAID
Twenty-year-old Morgan Saylor,
who plays Nicholas Brody’s daughter, Dana, on TV’s “Homeland,” is making a
smashing Off Broadway debut in Sarah Treem’s mildly provocative, often enjoyable, but
rather uneven new play, WHEN WE WERE YOUNG AND UNAFRAID. The production, given at the
Manhattan Theatre Club’s City Center venue, offers several outstanding
performances, particularly from Cherry Jones and Zoe Kazan, and is smartly
directed by Pam McKinnon, but good acting and direction can’t prevent Ms. Treem’s
play, which deals with feminist issues, from either its soap opera or soap box
tendencies.
Zoe Kazan, Morgan Saylor. Photo: Joan Marcus.
It’s 1972, a year before Roe vs.
Wade became law. Agnes (Ms. Jones) is a determined, middle-aged, single woman;
she’s a former nurse whose license was revoked because she performed abortions.
Agnes runs a bed and breakfast on an island off the coast of Seattle, where she
also harbors at least two or three battered women each year. Her main help is
the studious16-year-old Penny (Ms. Saylor), presumably her daughter, although
Penny calls Agnes by her given name. Agnes wants Penny—who has her eyes on Yale—to
date a nerdy classmate Penny calls a “blowhard”; Tommy, the football team
captain Penny longs to have take her to the prom (which she initially rejects as
being too “bourgeois”), ignores her. A young woman, Mary Anne (Ms. Kazan),
arrives, her face badly bruised, and Agnes and Penny begin their usual, secretive
procedure of welcoming, hiding, and caring for the woman; as always in such cases,
there’s a chance her spouse may be following her, bringing danger in his path. Mary
Anne is instructed to stay isolated in her room, and not to let any of the
regular guests see her. Soon, Mary Anne bonds with Penny and, despite her own
miserable experience with her husband (whom, foolishly, she can’t help calling),
advises the strangely eager Penny—up to now a budding feminist—on how to land
Tommy, teaching her the maneuvers that lead to a contrived development jarring
with everything we’ve thus far learned about Penny; they would also set a radical
feminist’s hair on fire.
We actually get to meet such a feminist
in the person of Hannah (Cherise Boothe), a turbulent, college-educated black
woman with an Angela Davis afro spouting the ideas of “political lesbian” Ti-Grace
Atkinson. Hannah’s seeking the Gorgons, a group who’ve set up a cult-like
lesbian commune nearby from which men are excluded. The commune is called
Womynland, thus eliminating the contamination of “man” from its name. There is
a man in the play, however, and it’s Paul (Patch Darragh), a songwriter taking
a break from his strained marriage in hopes of being able to write songs here
on the island.
Once these parts are in place the
situations that arise, which seem more like set pieces than organic
developments, set one character’s view of women’s place in the world, and how
they should behave vis à vis the opposite sex, against another. (Men, those
evil patriarchs, do not fare very well in this atmosphere, and Paul’s ambivalence
doesn’t do much for men, one way or the other.) Each woman will become, if not
a mouthpiece, then a representation of some aspect of early 1970s feminism
during those days when, as the song said, something was happening out there.
The presence of Paul, who
intrudes on the part of the house that Agnes considers her private space, will
lead to largely foreseeable romantic and sexual consequences, while further
complications will emerge from Hannah’s radical agenda. By the end of the play,
all the relationships will have gone through several permutations, and Agnes
will discover a part of herself she either didn’t know existed or that she kept
hidden for fear of dealing with it.
All of this happens in a very
realistic b&b kitchen-dining area, well designed by Scott Pask and nicely lit
by Russell H. Champa, where Agnes seems always to be making muffins, cookies,
or the like; there’s a sliding door at stage right leading to the rest of the
house, a door upstage, a staircase next to it, and a sink with a window over it
through which Hannah at one point enters and by which, needlessly, she tries to
leave. Jessica Pabst’s costumes seem true to the period, and the girlish, but not
especially appealing, dresses Penny dons in an attempt to follow Mary Anne’s
advice, add an effective touch.
Ms. Jones, using the same rich
Southern accent she recently employed in THE GLASS MENAGERIE (Agnes seems to
come from Tennessee, like Ms. Jones), is, as ever, a formidable stage presence,
fighting to protect her battered women, but fiercely demanding it be on her
terms, just as she does when struggling to fill her maternal role with the
newly rebellious Penny. Zoe Kazan shows many sides to Mary Anne, from
frightened abused wife to too-smart-for-own-good adviser to Penny. As Penny, Ms.
Saylor is every inch the anxious, insecure, and defiant teenager, not unlike
the role she plays on “Homeland.” Now that she’s proved she can handle such
roles, I look forward to seeing her in something completely different next time.
Ms. Boothe and Mr. Darragh fill out the excellent ensemble by making something watchable
of their unconvincing roles.
Sarah Treem’s credits include TV’s
“In Treatment,” “How to Make it in America,” both of which I like very much,
and “House of Cards,” which I still haven’t seen. She can certainly write, but
WHEN WE WERE YOUNG AND UNAFRAID doesn't rank with her finest work.
Note: City Center Stage 1 provides assisted listening devices to those who need them.
Note: City Center Stage 1 provides assisted listening devices to those who need them.