Seated: Marty Bongfeldt, Michael McGurk and Jo Anne Parady.
Standing: John Little and John Flarhety in the MTC MainStage
production of "Ancestral Voices." Photo by Marc Porier
There was a time called the 1930s and there was a place
called Buffalo .
The 30s are now chronicled in history books, and Buffalo wears a different face
and speaks a different language than it did six-plus decades ago, but you can
return to that time and that place at MTC MainStage in Westport to view a very
sound production of A. R. Gurney’s “Ancestral Voices,” a play (if you will –
some argue about its genre) about change and what is lost and gained in the
inevitable process.
Gurney wrote the play to be read on-book (i.e., with the
actors holding the scripts in their hands). Many companies have chosen to stage
the play differently, but director Kevin Connors has chosen to do it the old
fashioned way…and it works. The actors carry their scripts in black binders,
often resting them on two metal music stands. When not standing, the actors sit
in chairs aligned in a row on the stage. Sound boring? It’s not. In fact, what
this type of staging reveals is the power of the word and the skill that actors
bring to their craft, for you soon forget the scripts in hand as you are taken
back to a time and place when life was, if not simpler, at least bound by rules
that, if abided by, provided security, and if broken, placed the sinners under
the unflinching eyes of society’s angry demi-gods.
The play, which spans three decades, is narrated by Eddie
(Michael McGurk) and opens with a family on a car ride to visit Grandma, but
there is tension, for, as Harvey (John Flaherty), the father, drives, listens
and gently chastises his children, Jane, the mother (Marty Bongfeldt), must
explain to her three bickering children riding in the back seat – Eddie being
the middle child -- that Grandma Madeline (Jo Anne Parady) has left Grandpa Ed
(John Little) for another man whom they must now call Uncle Roger (also played
by Little), a long-standing family friend who is into horse riding (as is, now,
Grandma). What follows are three lines of development: Jane’s attempt to attend
to the needs of her divorced parents, Eddie’s relationship with his
grandfather, and the growing tension over what will happen when Grandma and
Grandpa finally meet again, all set against a running commentary on Buffalo’s
hidebound caste system and the growing threat of world-wide conflict.
In one respect, the play speaks to anyone who has ever asked
himself or herself: “Should I stay or should I leave?” The staying may mean
security at the price of a stultifying sameness that leads to a death-in-life
existence; the going may open up glorious possibilities or introduce problems
undreamt of.
At the heart of the play are three set-pieces: the fishing
trip that Grandpa Ed and Eddie go on; a family dinner wherein the price Grandma
has paid for her ‘liberation’ is revealed; and the final confrontation between
Grandma and Grandpa at a family wedding. Although the set consists of nothing
more than the aforementioned chairs and music stands in front of a simple
archway, all three of these set-pieces are fully realized by the actors…with
the help of the audience, which must suspend it’s disbelief and ‘imagine’ the
milieu in which the set-pieces occur. As such, as Gurney notes in the printed
program, the “form itself has an archaic quality, invoking, in some way the old
radio plays that disappeared after the war.”
Under Connor’s direction the actors work extremely well
together as they move forward and back as if they are spirits from the past
taking on physical form to tell their parts of the story, then slipping back
into the shadows. Especially moving is the fishing trip set-piece in which
Little wistfully comments on all that has passed from the world while McGurk,
evoking child-like eagerness and hero-worship, takes it all in. Equally
engrossing is the wedding scene. Here Gurney posits three possible scenarios,
two of which involve Grandpa finally winning the day, with the third – what
really happened – so touching because, though somewhat anti-climactic, rings so
true.
This is a gentle tale about gentler times, though those who
lived through them found them as fraught with angst, danger, anxiety and
confusion as we do in our time, and that is why the play – call it what you
will – works so well without all the usual theatrical trappings. It speaks to
the human condition, which is eternal.
“Ancestral Voices” runs through Feb. 17. For tickets or more
information call 203-454-3883 or go to www.musictheatreofct.com
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