Saturday, July 25, 2020

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 From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Helen Gallagher, Brad Sullivan.

HOTHOUSE [Drama/Alcoholism/Family/Marriage/Women] A: Megan Terry; D: Rae Allen; S: Lawrence King; C: Vernon Yates; L: William Mintzer; P: Chelsea Theatre Center of Brooklyn; T: Chelsea Theatre, Brooklyn Academy of Music (OB); 10/15/74-11/10/74 (32)

Avant-garde feminist playwright Megan Terry offered this surprisingly traditional realistic work about a family living in a fishing village cottage not far from Seattle. The focus is on three bawdy, hard-drinking women—a grandmother named Ma Sweetlove (Dorothy Chace), a mother named Roz (Helen Gallagher), and a teenage daughter named Judy (Kathleen Tolan). As Michael Feingold’s review implied, this trio offers a female version of the machismo behavior of conventional working-class men.

Roz is a former singer whose marriage to Jack (Brad Sullivan) is crumbling and whose daughter is involved with a clean-cut boy named David (Michael Cornelison). Roz and Ma aren’t happy about the relationship, and interfere in it. Jack wants Judy to stay with him on his boat, out of range from Roz’s influence. Roz has a lover, Andy (R.A. Dow). Jack has been carrying on with Roz’s friend Doll (Carol Morley). All ends ambiguously with the girl neither staying with her father nor marrying David.

Feingold said this conclusion “dramatizes neatly the position of women in a man’s world.” Terry’s play allows the women to end up with each other in a way that doesn’t involve their having to compromise themselves with the men in their lives. Feingold, who took much interest in the play, thought its major defect was the depiction of David, as if Terry had not been able to give the “opposition party” of males “a fair shake.” Otherwise, he thought it a “wise and painstaking production,” with a “mostly excellent” cast who all “sound like real people.” He called the play “an American Bernarda Alba, pulsating with lowlife and desire.” Clive Barnes’s diametrically opposed view described Hothouse, despite its good writing, as “cheap and obvious—it is a cliché set to the music of grimy and sudsy soap opera.” He liked Rae Allen’s “lively” direction, but called the acting “as heavy handed as the play.”