"A Tisket a Casket; or, Whatever Happened to Sister Rose?"
No sooner do the lights come up on the Ortiz funeral home in
Our Lady of 121st Street than
we see Victor (the excellent John Procaccino), a gray-haired man in a suit jacket
and boxer shorts (where his trousers should be), raging at the top of his lungs.
As Balthazar (Joey Auzenne, beautifully rough-edged), a whiskey-nipping
Latino detective in his mid-30s, stands listening, Victor pours forth a litany
of curses on the abusive father of the late nun. With Sister Rose's empty casket sitting right behind them, Victor condemns the man for being “a fuckin piece of
dirt, shanty-Irish-mick-fuck father!” Nor does he neglect to suggest
that “Demons should shit in his mouth daily.” How, he wonders, could something like this
have happened to the beloved Sister Rose?
Joey Auzenne, John Procaccino. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
Victor and Balthazar, who has come
in response to someone’s call, are former students of Sister Rose, as are all
but two of the play’s other ten characters, most of them there for her wake.
By the end of an essentially
plotless two hours we will learn only partially about what happened to Sister
Rose’s body. However, while it ties Giurgis’s dramatic package in a playwriting
bow, the revelation is secondary to the interactions among the work’s memorable
rogues’ gallery of eccentrics. One might almost say that Our Lady of 121st Street is, rather than a conventional
play, an episodic, dramatic concert in which the songs have been converted to
acting arias, including solos, duets, and choral numbers.
Hill Harper, John Doman. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
They include the flashy Walter “Rooftop”
Desmond (Hill Harper, dynamic), a voluble, bling-wearing, L.A. radio personality.
His inability to abandon soul-baring conversation for the confession he so
desperately needs frustrates the legless, and seemingly faithless, Father Lux
(John Doman, sensitively low-keyed).
Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Paola Lazaro. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Hill Harper, Dierdre Friel. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
Erick Betancourt, Maki Borden. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
Joey Auzenne, Jimmon Cole, Hill Harper, John Doman. Photo: Monique Carboni. |
Walt Spangler’s set, showing
multiple locations against a background of Harlem buildings, is too spread out
on the wide stage, dissipating focus, and creating problems that Rashad’s
directing doesn’t fully resolve. Keith Parham’s moody lighting and Alexis Forte’s
costumes, however, do much to improve the quality of the visuals.
Our Lady of 121st Street is early Guirgis; his later plays, like Jesus Hopped the “A” Train, revived on
this same stage this past October, show significant technical improvements. But,
even with its flaws, Our Lady, of the
nearly 2o plays I’ve reviewed since the 2018-2019 began, is (by a hair) the
best.
OTHER VIEWPOINTS:
Pershing Square Signature Center
480 W. 42nd St, NYC
Through June 17
.