"Stalking the Wild Morel"an
A couple of nights ago, my plus-one happened to ask if I’d ever had
a mushroom-based, hallucinogenic experience. I hadn’t but, coincidentally, Sam
Chanse’s Fruiting Bodies, the play I saw the next night, produced by the Ma-Yi Theater Company, is about
an avid mushroom hunter named Ben Nakagawa (Thom Sesma). Admittedly, Ben’s more
concerned with other types of mushrooms, particularly the edible ones; he's equally sensitive to the death caps, which can kill you.
Fruiting Bodies whose title means “the spore-producing organ of a
fungus, often seen as a mushroom or toadstool,” mixes conventional and magic
realism in a way that sometimes suggests a mushroom trip. Not a particularly mind-blowing
one, though.Emma Kikue, Kimiye Corwin. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
Ben, a sad, third-generation, middle-aged, Japanese-American, is mushroom hunting in
the forest near the reclusive town of Bolinas, California, not far from San Francisco.
Reid Thomson has provided an attractive forest setting, hauntingly lit by Jeannette
Oi-Suk Yew; it’s both realistic and stylized, with trees that revolve on cue, a
large, beanbag-like rock, and doors built into the side walls for exits and
entrances. The cushy boulder, in keeping with the play’s mystical underpinnings,
is said to be incredibly comfortable. It’s even called Rock Van Winkle because
you could fall asleep on it and never be seen again.
Jeffrey Omura, Emma Kikue. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
The actual Bolinas, as the play accurately notes, has no road
signs, which sets up the premise of Ben’s mixed-race, adult daughters, Vicky
(Emma Kikue) and Mush (Kimiye Corwin), getting lost in their car (the usual car
seats and a steering wheel) as they search for their father where even their phone
GPS systems don’t work. They’ll need to refine their internal GPS’s as they search
both for their quirky dad and for whatever it is that ties them all to one
another.
Jeffrey Omura. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
Vicky’s a programmer who wants to get back to her job creating
an app designed to facilitate human communication via social media. Mush, more intent on finding Ben, is rootless, having just been fired from her latest
job, teaching writing at SF State. The reason? Vandalizing school property. Something
of a conceptual artist, Mush (rhymes with “push”) gabbles pretentiously that what
she’s done--writing over public images of celebrities and major institution--is not graffiti but an act of “wiping” that deflates the power their images
have to remind the rest of us of our insignificance. Whatever.
Kimiye Corwin, Emma Kikue, Jeffrey Omura, Thom Sesma,. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
The sisters’ disagreement over this is just one of the things causing them to bicker and even physically fight over. Vicky, for example, seems
nearly as conversant with the biological facts surrounding mushrooms as her
father, while Mush (if you can buy it) wasn’t even aware the family house was
filled with books about mushrooms, much less that her sister was so
knowledgeable. It’s only one of the hard-to-swallow ingredients in this play
about the difficulties in human connectedness.
Jeffrey Omura, Thom Sesma, Emma Kikue, Kimiye Corwin. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
Wandering in the forest, Ben ruminates to the trees in monologues
clotted with scientific details about mushrooms, remembers the different times
he spent in the forest with his son, Eddie, from whom he's now estranged, and regrets his separation from his Finnish wife, involved with
another man. The split with Eddie—now married, with
a new child, to another man—happened when Eddie came out of the closet. (A homophobic dad being
shocked by his son’s sexuality is also a subject in Caroline’s Kitchen at 59E59.)
Emma Kikue, Jeffrey Omura, Kimiye Corwin, Thom Sesma. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
He also encounters a mischievous, unusually articulate, Puck-like,
10-year old boy, whose reality (“I’m already part of the forest,” he says) sometimes
seems questionable, and a giant morel mushroom, portrayed as a cunningly cool dude
in a red hoodie. It’s never clear if Ben is expressing incipient dementia or
random free association. (The boy, for all his sprite-like qualities, engages
with Vicky and Mush, so the nature of his existence remains moot.) Both the boy
and the human mushroom are played by adult actor Jeffrey Omura, who also
triples as Eddie. It’s a confusing conceit, carried out mainly by the Omura’s
attitudinal shifts accompanied by lighting changes. For all Omura’s
effort, it isn’t worth the trouble.
Jeffrey Omura, Kimiye Corwin. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
Jeffrey Omura, Emma Kikue. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
All the performances are satisfactory but none rises above
the script’s most essential requirements, Nor does Shelley Butler’s bland, dully
paced direction go the extra mile in making this production more than just
another blip in the new season. Hopefully, Ma-Yi’s next outing will prove more
fruitful than Fruiting Bodies.
Clurman
Theatre/Theatre Row
410
W. 42nd St., NYC
Through
May 19
OTHER
VIEWPOINTS: