James Woods, Cara Duff-MacCormick, Christopher Guest. (Photos: Martha Swope). |
1.
MOONCHILDREN
[Comedy/College/Friendship/Illness/Sex/War/Youth] A: Michael Weller; D: Alan
Schneider; S: William Ritman; C: Marjorie Slaiman; L: Martin Aronstein; P:
David Merrick i/a/w Byron Goldman and Max Brown b/a/w Martin Rosen, in the
Washington Arena Stage Production; T: Royale Theatre; 2/21/72-3/4/72 (16)
James Woods, Edward Hermann, Stephen Collins, Maureen Anderman, Jill Eikenberry, Christopher Guest, Kevin Conway. |
Although written by an American, Michael Weller, Moonchildren was first produced at
London’s Royal Court Theatre, where it was called Cancer (because one of its characters has a mother dying of the
disease). After its British success, it moved to Washington, D.C.’s Arena Stage
under the title by which it is now known. In New York, it received raves from
the Times and several others that
should have propelled it to hit status. Surprisingly, it played to empty
houses and folded in two weeks, creating great consternation among its
supporters. A year later, mounted Off Broadway, with an entirely different
company, it clicked.
Henry Hewes, who liked the play, suggested that the reason
for its Broadway flop was its lack of “stars, music, plot intrigue, sensation,
romantic theatricality, or sustained painless laughter,” ingredients that
appeal to the “wealthier playgoers” who fill Broadway’s large playhouses.
The comedy concerns a group of seven mildly radical college
students in the mid-1960s, five men and two women, all of them vibrant with life though
self-destructive. They share a shabby apartment during the
year they are scheduled to graduate from their Midwestern school. The friends
live their lives on a diet of fantasizing, contemptuous wisecracking, put-ons,
self-deceptions, and cynicism. Sex, school, war, cancer, and peace marches are
their chief conversation subjects.
Their story is loosely structured and made up of a
succession of comic scenes. “[C]onstant activity is engaged in but nothing happens,” wrote Harold Clurman. It is
the friends’ relationships with one another and the world around them that
forms the dramatic nucleus rather than a conventional plot.
Moonchildren was adored
by Walter Kerr as “one of the most moving and one of the funniest plays of the
decade,” an opinion shared by Clive Barnes, who called the play “a bitterly
funny and funnily bitter” work that is “an epitaph for its time.” “[F]ull of
zest and authority,” it would, said Barnes, disturb some, but others would find
it enlightening. Various reviewers believed that it perfectly captured the
spirit and language of mid-60s college life among a certain segment of the
student population, a belief best expressed by Julius Novick: “It . . .
depicted, better than any play . . . I have come across, the strange
combination of yearning good will, deep suspicion, envy, fascination, and
wonderment with which the middle-aged generation regards those mysteriously
privileged creatures, ‘the kids.’”
Among strikingly opposing voices was that of Arthur Sainer,
who trashed the play as “callous pandering to the box-office” and “just so much
bullshit.” Brendan Gill thought it “a lifeless little patchwork of a play,”
with an uninteresting assortment of characters. And John Simon resented Weller’s
“tricks,” his dishonest manipulation of plot devices and character reactions,
his inaccurate “tone” in presenting his dramatic “data,” and his “infelicitous”
attempts at steering the comedy into the paths of “significance.”
The most admired performances were those of Kevin Conway as
Mike, James Woods as Bob Rettie, and Cara Duff-MacCormick as Shelly, a
shy girl who spends much of her time seeking shelter under a table. The sizable
cast, with many noteworthy names, included Maureen Anderman as Ruth, Edward Hermann
as Cootie, Stephen Collins as Dick, Christopher Guest as Norman, Jill
Eikenberry as Kathy, Robert Prosky as Mr. Willis, Louis Zorich as Bream, Salem
Ludwig as Uncle Murry, Michael Tucker as Milkman, and so on.
Anderman won a Theatre World Award; MacCormick, who also
received a Theatre World Award, was nominated for a Tony as Best Supporting
Actress, Play; Woods landed another Theatre World Award; and Weller was given
the Drama Desk Award for Most Promising Playwright.
2.
[Dramatic Revival] D: John Pasquin; S: William F. Matthews;
C: Mary Warren; L: Joseph Dziedzic; P: Steve Steinlauf i/a/w Jay Kingwill b/a/w
Lucille Lortel Productions, Inc.; T: Theatre de Lys (OB); 11/4/73-10/20/74
(394)
Rene Tadlock, Michael Sacks, Jim Jansen. |
Jim Jansen, Kenneth McMillan, Elizabeth Lathram, James Seymour. |
Walter Kerr, however, criticized the director for letting an
air of “self-pity” intervene in the second half. He also pointed out that a
striking feature of the Broadway mounting, a Christmas tree of over 800 stacked
milk bottles, was missing. Another change, noted by Simon,
was the improved scene-shifting approach that did without a curtain so as to
allow the actors themselves to move the props around in dim lighting, doing so
rhythmically in ways that commented on their characters. The acting was highly
effective, especially in the hands of Richard Cox as Bob Rettie, James Seymour
as Mike, Jim Jansen as Cootie, and Kenneth McMillan as Mr. Willis. Few of the
actors had the reputations, then or later, of those in the Broadway company
(McMillan and Michael Sacks, who played Norman, were probably the best known).