“A Taste of Honey”
There’s a lot of buzz, most of it good, about The Secret
Life of Bees, a sweet-as-honey musical realization of Sue Monk Kidd’s bestselling
2002 novel of that name, now at the Atlantic Theater Company’s Linda Gross
Theater. The book was also adapted into a 2008 film
starring Dakota Fanning, Jennifer Hudson, Queen Latifah, and Alicia Keys.
Elizabeth Teeter and Manoel Felciano. Photo: Ahron Foster. |
LaChanze, Elizabeth Teeter. Photo: Ahron Foster. |
The story, occupying a two-act structure that lasts two and a
half hours, centers on self-centered (at first), 14-year-old Lily Owens (Elizabeth
Teeter, impressive), with dreams of being a writer, from the fictional town of Sayvon,
South Carolina. Her father, T. Ray (Mandel Feliciano, very good), blames her
for the death of her mother, who died when the much younger Lily picked up a
gun that went off. She feels not only great guilt but a wrenching yearning for
her mother’s arms.
T. Ray treats her cruelly, punishing even minor infractions by
forcing her to kneel on gravel till her knees are raw. She and the family’s snuff-using
black housekeeper, Rosaleen (Saycon Sengbloh, sensational), injured by local rednecks
(Joe Cassidy, Matt DeAngelis) when she attempts to register to vote, run off together,
landing in the town of Tiburon, North Carolina. There, Lily notices honey jars
for sale with the image on them of a black Madonna, the same image as on a postcard
from her mother.
Eisa Davis, Vita E.
Cleveland,
Romelda Teron Benjamin, Saycon Sengbloh, Anastacia McCleskey,
Nathaniel Stampley, LaChanze, and Elizabeth Teeter. Photo: Ahron Foster.
|
This leads her and Rosaleen to an apiary, where they are
cared for and given work by the sisters May (Anastacia McCleskey, wonderful),
June (Eisa Davis, outstanding), and August Boatright (LaChanze, exceptional).
The latter is the well-educated family leader, allowing literary references to
abound (Rosaleen is given Jane Eyre to read). These determined, independent
black women have created a prosperous beekeeping business despite their racist
surroundings. Lily forms a bond with another worker, Zach (Brett Gray, excellent),
a black boy with aspirations of becoming a lawyer, but their budding attraction
will have to contend with 1964 prejudices.
The sisters, and those associated with them, worship the
statue (actually, a ship’s figurehead found floating in a river) of the black
Mary that signifies their honey brand, but also symbolizes maternal love. The scenes
expressing the awe in which the statue is held (when the darkened stage glitters
with candles) are among the most moving in the play. Lily’s mother had a deep
connection with the sisters, which will eventually be revealed.
LaChanze, Elizabeth Teeter. Photo: Ahron Foster. |
Other dramatic incidents that move the tale toward its
conclusion include the outcome of a suit for the affections of the sour June (she
can’t get over a jilting at the altar) by the tenacious school principal Neal
(Nathaniel Stampley, perfection), who refuses to accept her constant
rejections; Zach’s arrest while driving by white cops in a scene similar to the
kinds of incidents that continue to roil our society; and T. Ray’s discovery of
Lily’s whereabouts.
Brett Gray, Elizabeth Teeter. Photo: Ahron |
Gold’s beautifully staged production uses the increasingly common,
simplified approach (as in Fun Home) of an essentially bare stage (design
by Mimi Lien), its naked brick walls exposed, and its locales indicated by
selected furnishings and props (like the stacks of realistic honey trays)
carried off and on with choreographic precision by the actors. Beekeeping
smokers play a part as well, providing an organic way of introducing hazy
effects as the actors create clouds of smoke with them. Also charming are the
bees themselves—golden, trinket-like creatures dangling from wires on rods manipulated
by three performers.
Eisa Davis, Nathanial Stampley. Photo: Ahron Foster. |
Saycon Sengbloh, Nathaniel Stampley, Eisa Davis, Anastacia McCleskey, & LaChanze. Photo: Ahron Foster.
|
LaChanze, Jai’Len Christine Li Josey, Vita E. Cleveland,
Elizabeth Teeter, Romelda Teron Benjamin. Photo: Ahron Foster.
|
Eisa Davis, Jai’Len Christine Li Josey, Vita E. Cleveland, LaChanze, Anastacia McCleskey, Nathaniel Stampley, Romelda Teron Benjamin, Saycon Sengbloh. Photo: Ahron Foster. |
Each actor brings conviction and depth to their roles. The book contains many things familiar from multiple other depictions of the Civil Rights years, and it sometimes teeters on the sentimental. Nonetheless, its expert presentation makes it all seem newly minted. The Secret Life of Bees has plenty of sting in its tail but it soothes as well with an unforgettable taste of honey.
Linda Gross Theater/Atlantic Theater
Company
336 W. 20th St., NYC
336 W. 20th St., NYC
Through July 21
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