Sunday, June 21, 2020

172. FISHING. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

John Heard, Guy Boyd, Tom Lee Jones, Kathryn Grody, Lindsay Crouse.

FISHING [Comedy-Drama/Drugs/Friendship/Marriage/Rural/Suicide] A: Michael Weller; D: Peter Gill; S/C: Pat Woodbridge; L: Ian Calderon; P: New York Shakespeare Festival; T: Public Theater/Newman Theater (OB); 2/1/75-3/9/75 (44)
 
John Heard, Tom Lee Jones.
Michael Weller’s first play after his hit Moonchildren met with something less than the critical acclaim of its predecessor. One reason was that its characters seemed too much like those of the earlier play, albeit about eight years older.

Fishing takes place in a rustic Oregon cabin where the gruff bill (Tom[my] Lee Jones) and Shelly (Lindsay Crouse) live with their wealthy, suicidal friend Robbie (Guy Boyd), who loves Shelly. The men dream of buying a boat and going into business as deep-sea fishermen. A married couple, Mary-Ellen (Kathryn Grody) and Dane (John Heard), an architect, arrives to spend the weekend. The five friends and former roommates pass the time by taking peyote and getting involved in far-out conversations and weird carryings-on.

Ultimately, the weekend concludes, the feckless Robbie (who has tried to kill himself) remains with Bill and Shelly and gives Bill money for his boat—though he wishes he could move on and make something of his life—and Mary-Ellen and Dana depart.

The thinly plotted work was concerned more than with its story, being focused on its characters and their meandering search for life’s meaning. It succeeded, for the most part, in presenting each individual with insight and humanity. Clive Barnes said, “You get to know the people and they are interesting.” Weller’s gift for dialogue rarely failed him, nor did his ability to write laugh-getting lines.

The blend of pathos and humor spurred John Simon to call Fishing “a play of texture,” with an accurate view of the lives it pictured, but Simon was a bit put off by an overly clever streak he spotted in the language. Edith Oliver thought the characters convincing, but wished she could find their behavior “more interesting . . . and . . . more contagious.” Comparing the work with Moonchildren, Walter Kerr said, “the little jokes are littler now, the antic urge to con the world gone flat.”

British director Peter Gill’s first New York assignment was well handled, and each actor (in a cast that also included Edward Seamon and Raymond J. Barry) received respectable notices.