51. THE OPPONENT
THE OPPONENT, Chicago playwright Brett Neveu’s
K.O. of a drama at 59E59, tops the list of over half-a-dozen plays about
boxers and boxing on New York stages over the past two years. The soon-to-be
retired ROCKY is the most obvious, of course, but let’s not forget the Broadway
revival of GOLDEN BOY and the Off-Broadway stagings of FETCH CLAY, MAKE MAN, CHERRY
SMOKE, and TYSON VS. ALI, not to mention Broadway’s KINKYBOOTS, whose
transvestite hero is a trained fighter, and the Off-Broadway revival of
DONNYBROOK, about a pugilist who quit after killing a man in the ring. Mr.
Neveu makes good use of the metaphoric associations of boxing to tell a story
that he says “seeks to understand the profession of ‘boxer’ and the toll that
the profession takes on the body, mind and soul. The play also discusses themes
outside the ring; themes of fathers and sons, individual responsibility and how
protecting one’s pride can damage those one professes to care about.”
Guy Van Swearingen, Kamal Angelo Bolden. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
The tiny Theatre C at 59E59, which seats around 60,
and is often used for scenically spare plays and cabaret shows, has been
radically transformed by designer Joey Wade into the dingy Rock and Anvil Boxing Gym
in Lafayette, Louisiana, with the main acting space occupied by an actual
boxing ring, and the walls—covered with a shabby American flag and faded posters
of old matches—painted to resemble grimy concrete. The acting takes place both
in the ring and in the cramped spaces between it and the audience, which
surrounds the ring on two sides. When a character does his lightning-fast rope jumping exercises, it’s right in the midst of the audience, seated only inches away. Rows of circular metal lamps, used by lighting
designer Mike Durst to create just the right grimy atmosphere, hang from above.
This two-act, 100-minute production comes to New
York from Chicago’s Red Orchid theatre with the same creative team, led by the
very talented director Karen Kessler, and starring the original two-actor cast,
Guy Van Swearingen as the gym owner and boxing trainer Tremont “Tre” Billiford,
and Kamal Angelo Bolden as the aspiring African-American boxer Donell Fuseles, fiery,
bright, and cocky in the Muhammad Ali mold.
Kamal Angelo Bolden, Guy Van Swearingen. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
THE OPPONENT is more a play of character and
ambience than plot. In the first act, the 20-year-old Donell is training for a
fight with rising star Jas Dennis. Putting him through his paces in the
ring is the 45-year-old Tre, usually with training pads on his hands that
Donell hits in a series of bam-bam repetition exercises. These sequences, which
take up a considerable amount of stage time, are remarkable exhibitions of
athletic acting, performed with rapid-fire punching. Given the apparent
power of Mr. Bolden—whose arms are as thick as battering rams—these blows must sting like a
bee, even through the pads.
The combinations are sometimes rather complex and
there’s a lot of bobbing, weaving, and ducking in these precisely choreographed
scenes that spell imminent danger if someone moves the wrong way. Making the sparring exercises even more impressive is the ongoing dialogue between Donell and Tre
as they work out their interpersonal issues as trainer and fighter, all the
while throwing, catching, and deflecting pounding blows. The popping sounds of
leather upon leather punctuate the words with rhythmically precise timing. The physical contrast between the young,
black cruiserweight with the bulging biceps and the balding, middle-aged white
trainer (and former boxer) is belied by Tre’s considerable agility, vigor, and
boxing knowhow.
In act two, set five years later, the men have slowed down a
bit, which doesn’t prevent them, near the end, from getting into a full-fledged
fight that ends with something of a shock. A very respectful nod must be made
in the direction of boxing trainer Sam Colonna, and John Tovar, the stage fight specialist who has created a bout of fisticuffs that comes as close
to realism as possible within the confines of such close quarters and the need
to protect the actors from harm.
Mr. Neveu’s lingo studded, largely staccato dialogue is principally about boxing, and, while I don’t make it a practice to hang
around boxing gyms, smells to me of raw authenticity, like the sweat coming off these actors' bodies; some of the chatter is vague, but
the actors speak it with complete naturalness. Aside from the training process,
not much happens in a conventional sense in act one, as Tre and Donell talk
about local boxers and managers, and comment on Donell’s physical and
psychological readiness for that evening’s fight. There’s also much about “moving
up” in the fight business, climbing the rungs of the ladder. The men's conversation
is a sort of spoken correlative of their sparring, shifting directions
emotionally as various topics intrude, such as Donell’s level of confidence and
his desire to beat Jas Dennis so he can deprive him of all the signs of success
he’s been able to acquire. There’s a tension between Donell and Tre that now and then
turns bitter, some of it turning on Donell's desire for the reluctant Tre to see his fight and visit his dressing room afterward. The reasons for the characters' respective hostilities are often fuzzy, but there’s also
mutual respect, suggesting a father-son relationship, although few
personal details about either of these emotionally needy characters are provided.
Tre’s big career moment was a championship fight in
which he lost by a TKO; he uses the fact that he got up when knocked down as
his mantra for what makes a good fighter; getting up when you’re down becomes
a thematic throughlines. For Tre, boxers must avoid at all
costs becoming what he calls “a low-class fighter, a goddamned road-dog.” Donell
picks up on something Tre says that suggests he’s weak; to the sensitive Donell,
Tre thrives on getting boxers to lose their confidence. As Donell tells Tre: “You
always want fighters movin’ up how you want it moved and if you don’t see ‘em
getting it the way you see it, even for just a quick second they don’t do what
you think they should, if they don’t hear it or do it or try to read your mind,
you write ‘em off.”
This issue rises again in act two, when Donell, who
hasn’t seen Tre since the fight he was about to have in act one, returns;
Tre behaves at first as if he doesn’t know him. Donell, now obviously a “road-dog,” is
25, married and with a kid. He’s got a losing record, and a fight coming up,
so he comes to Tre for help, but he’s more likely seeking either something else. Tre, for his part, hasn’t done much better, running a dilapidated gym with few
fighters and lousy equipment. The men resume their verbal sparring, whose lightning
jabs are matched when they put on the gloves, leading to their climactic brawl and a deeper understanding of Tre's behavior.
The rough, often crude, and sometimes elliptical dialogue is spoken with total
conviction. Mr. Bolden mingles petulance with dignity in his
portrayal of the feisty boxer. The enigmatic, dour Mr. Van Swearingen, speaking
in a thick--sporadically incomprehensible--Louisiana accent, bears a physical and vocal resemblance to
Robert Duvall. He looks nothing like a conventional boxer (although the actor was a
professional firefighter) but his deft moves force you to
suspend your disbelief. Few actors get the workout these two go through every
night, and by the time the play ends, you’ll feel your heartbeat quickened
along with theirs. I doubt theatergoers will be throwing the towel in on THE
OPPONENT.