Monday, December 16, 2024

41. EUREKA DAY (seen December 14, 2024)

 





Jonathan Spector’s Eureka Day had its New York premiere in 2019 at Walkerspace, Soho Rep’s former haunt, where I reviewed it. This clever play has returned in a completely new Manhattan Theatre Company production at Broadway’s Samuel J. Friedman Theatre. It continues to excel as a bitingly topical dramedy, one that reminds me of the immortal words of Sean O’Casey’s bibulous “paycock,” Captain Jack Boyle: “The world’s in a terrible state of chassis.” (The following adapts some material from my original review.)


Bill Irwin, Thomas Middleditch, Amber Gray, Jessica Hecht, Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz. All photos: Jeremy Daniels.
 

Unless we live in a bubble (and many do), it’s a wonder how we navigate the “chassis” of daily life when we’re besieged by more nerve-jangling issues clamoring for our attention than ever before: presidential politics, terrorism, climate change, drug addiction, health care, abortion, white nationalism, gun control, the Middle East, the environment, sexual assault, transgenderism, racism, antisemitism, massive hurricanes, a free press, privacy, identity, unidentified drones, vaccinations . .


Amber Gray, Jessica Hecht. 

Each of these (and others) could be the spur that drives writers to create topically pertinent dramas, comedies, and musicals. Aside from the endless stream of works dealing with identity issues (ethnic, racial, or sexual), however, those dealing in potent ways with the others come more as single spies than as battalions. Fortunately, one such spy is Eureka Day, set mostly in the child-friendly library—perfectly designed by Todd Rosenthal and lit by Jen Schriever—of the eponymous Berkeley private school.

 

Bill Irwin, Jessica Hecht. 


 Eureka Day—originally done by the Aurora Theatre Company in Berkeley—gives the winter season, with its paucity of straight plays dominated by a succession of musicals, a well-needed shot in the arm with its clever way of exploring the ramifications of compulsory vaccinations. With anti-vaxxer Robert Kennedy, Jr., up for a major federal health care position, the subject could not be riper.


Thomas Middleditch, Amber Gray, Bill Irwin.

 Spector carefully develops his discussion drama around Eureka Day’s four continuing board members and their “floating” member, whose child is a new enrollee. The continuing ones are Don (Bill Irwin, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), the school head, and the parents, Suzanne (Jessica Hecht, Summer, 1976), Meiko (Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz, making her Broadway debut), and Eli (Thomas Middleditch, TV’s “Silicon Valley”). Joining them is Carina (Amber Gray, Hadestown). Clint Ramos’s perfectly considered costumes for these well-off, well-educated, California parents help make them all seem real.

 

Thomas Middleditch, Amber Gray, Bill Irwin, Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz, Jessica Hecht.

The board prides itself on the school’s emphasis on social justice and non-confrontational attitudes toward controversial issues. Spector masterfully satirizes this by putting them through linguistic hoops as they struggle to articulate their thoughts without giving offense. That, however, doesn’t prevent the occasional, unintentional, mildly racist sling sent by the embarrassingly apologetic Suzanne in the direction of the African American Carina.

 

Eureka Day, craftily directed by Steppenwolf’s Anna D. Shapiro (August: Osage County), covers a lot of ground (even squeezing in an affair between Eli and Meiko) in its now smartly trimmed 95-minute version (it ran over two hours in 2019). Although it has fun poking fun at how concerns for diversity lead to micro-labeling ethnicities, its chief mission is to show what happens when the board is forced to deal with an outbreak of mumps leading to a health department directive requiring all the non-vaccinated students to get shots. Just because this school is in the liberal enclave of Berkeley is no reason to believe the well-read parents all accept the scientific support for the importance of vaccines, whether for mumps or a host of other ailments.

 

Spector does an exquisite job of making fun of the stranglehold forcing the board to consider everyone’s ideas as equally valid, demonstrating the emotional and psychological tubes through which the board members—overseen by the always placating Don—must squeeze themselves to show how fair and open they are to all opinions. The word “woke” is never spoken but you’d have to be asleep to miss its presence. Politesse in the name of political correctness has rarely been so finely shaded, creating a situation where no one can take a position because to do so would be to express advocacy rather than seek consensus, as if consensus is even possible. Spector’s demonstration of the conflict between the relative value of individual needs and community ones is one of the play’s strongest features.


Of enormous help is the playwright’s capturing the hesitant rhythms of dialogue in which the otherwise articulate characters struggle to avoid offending by backtracking at any sign of disagreement or by speaking in partial sentences and ellipses. Feelings and opinions are repressed in the interest of “community” values, often creating time-burning digressions when they should be confronting concrete problems. Don, especially, is unable to stand up for his beliefs, claiming he’s just a “facilitator.”

 

There is one particularly brilliant comic scene revealing both the board’s suppression of its own disparate views and the far freer ones of the school’s parents as demonstrated during an online livestream meeting held between the board and the parents. As Don and the board talk about the issues, a plethora of parental comments are projected (projection design by David Bengali) on a large upstage screen.

If you’ve ever engaged in an online discussion, you can imagine the vitriol that pecking at a keyboard can inspire, even when your name is attached to your remarks. Mixed with the “thumbs up” emojis that keep popping up at regular intervals, and, as tempers rise, getting ever bigger laughs, are one hilarious insult and riposte after the other. It’s sometimes impossible to follow what the actors are saying while simultaneously reading the online comments, which require constant attention. You may not even be able to tell if the bursts of raucous laughter are inspired by something someone said (and that you missed) or something someone wrote. I wonder if the actors themselves, who do their energetic best to get their points across, know just how much they’re being upstaged by all the trolling.

Although I’d like to see the cast take it down a notch in the opening scene, when they display a tendency to push, as if they feel a need to grab us before we know who they are. Each actor eventually deserves a shout-out, but I’ll choose Jessica Hecht’s overexplaining, vaccine-questioning Suzanne as the standout. The role itself, of course, is a juicy plum with many dimensions; I pointed to Tina Benko in the same role five years ago. Hecht retains her distinctive vocal inflections, a sort of breathless, placating tone, mingled with tremulous urgency, although modulated here more than in some other of her performances. The more you see this star, the more you recognize her special uniqueness.

Spector manages to avoid injecting the play with overt polemics, allowing his characters to show what happens when both-sideism is the order of the day. Much as he needs to cloud the discussions with disclaimers, though, there’s no doubt where he stands. And the tag line he’s added to this new production could not be improved.

 

I wished in 2019 that Eureka Day would prove contagious and be quarantined somewhere for a longer run. I’m happy to say that wish came true.

 

Eureka Day

Samuel J. Friedman Theatre

261 W. 47th Street, NYC

Through January 19