“No Saint without a Past, No Sinner
without a Future”
There are 8
million stories in the naked city and, proportionately, a good number of them are in Stephen
Adly Guirgis’s Halfway Bitches Go Straight to Heaven. This rich, rambling,
if undisciplined new play, coproduced by the Atlantic and LAByrinth Theater Companies,
is the latest from the rambunctious pen of the always exciting Guirgis, whose raw
prose and colorful underclass types occupy such rippling works as Between
Riverside and Crazy and Jesus
Hopped the ‘A’ Train.
Halfway
Bitches . . . is an ensemble
dramedy with 18 actors (two of whom play two roles each), energetically
directed by John Ortiz, artistic director of the LAByrinth. It’s set in Hope
House, a struggling, Upper West Side, government-funded, halfway house for female
substance abusers, prostitutes, ex-cons, and the like, run by Miss Rivera (Elizabeth
Rodriguez). She’s a no-nonsense, overworked administrator who handles the
pressures of a failed marriage, an alienated daughter, lack of funding, and her
difficult residents by knocking back slugs from a bottle in her desk drawer.Elizabeth Canavan, Liza Colón-Zayas, Kara Young, Pernell Walker. |
Those residents,
each of whom has his or her own story, include Sarge (Liza Colón-Zayas), a fierce,
PTSD- and bipolar-afflicted Iraq war vet, fighting to hold on to Bella (Andrea
Syglowski), a bosomy stripper burdened with a baby, a needle habit, and a brutal husband, Nicky (Greg Keller); a Nigerian social worker, Mr. Mobo (Neil Tyrone
Pritchard), fornicating with a single-mother resident called Munchies (Pernell
Walker); and a priest, Father Miguel (David Anzuelo), who combines humane
wisdom with martial arts expertise and a surprising attitude toward the sixth
commandment. His motto: “No saint without a past, no sinner without a future.”
Pernell Walker, Victor Almanzar. |
Kristina Poe, Gregg Keller. |
We also
meet Wanda Wheels (Patrice Johnson Chevannes), a wheelchair-bound invalid with
a theatrical past and a grand manner, who once knew Noam Chomsky; Rockaway
Rosie (Elizabeth Canavan), white, middle-aged, and alcoholic; Happy Meal Sonia
(Wilemina Olivia-Garcia), a mentally ailing mother, and Taina (Viviana Valeria), her loving
daughter fighting—despite resistance—to help her; Venus Ramirez (Esteban Andres
Cruz), a kind, transsexual addict, who insists on the right to be in a
woman’s institution; Betty Woods (Kristina Poe), an overweight, smelly, abused,
self-published author of a pornographic novel, who has an exquisitely sensitive
scene with Venus; and so on. Including a goat.
Sean Carvajal, Kara Young. |
For a little less than three hours, Guirgis weaves his many strands together within a plot of sorts
about the threatened demise of this home for the dispossessed. His goal is to
illuminate the human hearts of people whose existence most of us ignore, like
the homeless panhandlers we see on the streets and subways. With few
exceptions, these people, annoying—or even violent—as they may be, come off in the
playwright’s hands as lovable eccentrics, even their frequent outbursts of
anger (shouting is a default for many of them), somehow failing to turn us
against them.
Elizabeth Canavan, Kara Young. |
This being a Guirgis play, they also speak
with remarkable expressivity, some capable of stringing together assaults
of poetic profanity that most better-educated people could never achieve. One,
in fact, a 15-year-old called Little Melba Diaz (Kara Young), recites a rap poem she’s
written, which contains the title Guirgis gives his play. In it she recounts her escaping from foster care, her disastrous experiences with the
opposite sex, her becoming pregnant and homeless, and a litany of other
misfortunes that might have led to suicide had she not met Father Miguel.
Victor Almanzar, Esteban Andres Cruz. |
Elizabeth Canavan, Patrice Johnson Chevannes, Kara Young, Pernell Walker. |
The Linda Gross Theater's stage is occupied by Narelle Sisson’s expansive,
two-story set, effectively lit by Mary Louise Geiger, showing the institution’s shabby interior, with its glass-doored entrance at one side. Between the front
row and the stage is the narrow sidewalk area (a Siamese connection attached to
the wall) where the residents hang out. A bench and street lamp are placed down left. Alexis Forte has contributed the
authentic-looking costumes, and Elisheba Ittoop the proper background sound and
music.
Esteban Andres Cruz, Andrea Syglowski. |
There
being so many vivid performances it’s difficult to select any for special commendation.
If I had to single out a single actor, it would be Patrice Johnson Chevannes,
whose elegant voice, diction, and manner perfectly limn the declining,
anorexic, alcoholic Wanda. But that’s really not fair to the powerful
work of Colón-Zayas, Cruz, Poe, . . . and, well, everybody else!
Liza Colón-Zayas, Andrea Syglowski. |
Liza Colón-Zayas, Elizabeth Rodriguez. |
Stephen
Adly Guirgis takes no half-measures in Halfway Bitches Go Straight to Heaven,
a title that, given the sympathy with which he depicts his wounded characters, hopefully describes their destiny.
Atlantic
Theater Company/Linda Gross Theater
336
W. 20th St., NYC
Through
January 5