Alice McMahon |
Currently at Square One Theatre Company in Stratford , those shoulders belong to Alice McMahon,
who stars in Becoming Dr. Ruth, a
dramatized biography of the famed sex therapist written by Mark St. Germaine.
For 90 or so minutes, McMahon relates the story of the diminutive German girl
who, at 10 years old, escaped from Hitler’s Germany
to Switzerland , then on to Israel , and then France ,
and finally the United
States , where she eventually became a
celebrity, all told in a polyglot accent.
In preparing for the role, McMahon just didn’t rely on St.
Germain’s script. “I always do research, even if I only have four or five lines,”
McMahon said in a recent interview after doing a 20-minute preview of the show
at Watermark in Bridgeport .
“Dr. Ruth is all over the Internet. Listening to her, watching her in
interviews, gives you a lot of insight into the woman,” McMahon said. “It might
tell you how to deliver a line in a certain way that you might not have done
before. For example, a little tidbit. You remember she gives a little girl her
doll on the Kindertransport to Switzerland .
She met that girl later and asked her about the doll and the girl didn’t
remember it. ‘Well,” Dr. Ruth said, ‘You think she could have told a little
white lie.’”
McMahon was not unfamiliar with the play before she got the
role. She had done a reading of it at the Stratford Library for Tom Holehan,
the play’s director, two years ago. However, that didn’t mean she had the
script down pat. Once she knew she was going to perform Dr. Ruth, she began memorizing her lines in December, 2016. “I
counted the weeks until the rehearsals began and I did five pages a week.”
However, she was not exactly off-book at the start of rehearsals. As she
explained, “When you start adding movement you need the script. However, I’d
say by the second week I was pretty much off-book. However, it was daunting –
38 pages or so.”
When you’re working with other actors on the stage they, in
their dialogue, provide you with cues. If an actor says, “Darlene, where were
you last night?” the actress playing Darlene uses that as a cue to deliver her
appropriate line, unless she goes blank – but even then her fellow actors will
cover for her, help her to get back on track. Such is not the case, or the
relative comfort, in a one-woman show. However, there are ways to generate
cues.
“The play is not really chronological,” McMahon said. “She
jumps here and there in her story. I was pretty secure with the sections that
hung all together, but then you think, ‘My God, am I supposed to be in Palestine now?’ But there
are sound cues – a telephone ringing – and the music – ‘The Good Ship Lollipop’
reminds me that I’m supposed to be doing the Shirley Temple section, there’s
the music box music, there’s violin music for the school and the Jewish music –
all that’s very helpful.” Then there are the props – primarily photographs
stored in a crate. “Tom said, ‘If you get confused, everything is in that box.’
It’s all in order – that’s also really helpful.” And finally there’s the
blocking – the director suggesting (or dictating) the actor’s movements.
“That’s also extremely helpful,” McMahon said. “You know, I’ve moved over here
so I should he saying this, then I’m over there and that’s when I deliver these
other lines.”
Then there’s the accent. Dr. Ruth’s voice is very
distinctive, but McMahon said that she had little trouble coming up with and
maintaining what is, obviously, not her normal speaking voice. “For some
reason,” she explained, “it just seemed to come naturally. One of the things
that helped me was – well, who can do this accent? It’s a combination of
Israeli, German, French and American, so I didn’t have a feeling – I just
didn’t think it was that important to exactly capture her accent. However,
things that were hard were the German words. For example, I looked up ‘Lodz ’ – my God, there
were like five different pronunciations of the word. Then there was her doll’s
name. At one performance there was a woman in the first row and when I said the
doll’s name she started shaking her head. I wanted to catch her afterwards to
ask her how it should be pronounced but she had gone.”
Finally, there’s the intimacy of the Square One venue, which
is currently nested in the Stratford
Academy , essentially a
black box theater with perhaps 50 seats. From the stage you don’t just see the
first or second row, you see the entire audience. “It is a little more
difficult,” McMahon said. “It breaks your concentration a bit, especially if
you see someone you know. I ask all my family not to tell me when they’re
coming and not to sit where I can see them, because it takes you out of it. It
shouldn’t – discipline – but it does.”
In researching the role and acting in the play, McMahon has
come to truly respect Ruth Westheimer. “I just adore her,” McMahon said. “You
know, going though what she went through and turning out to be what she’s
become, she’s just so positive, and I really think it’s the love that she got
as a little kid, she had that security and confidence that people really loved
her. There’s that line from her grandmother: ‘Always smile. Be cheerful. You
are loved.’ I think that helped her throughout her whole life.”
Becoming Dr. Ruth runs through May 21. For tickets or more information call 203-375-8778 or go to www.squareonetheatre.com
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