Bigger Than Broadway! (June 2, 2003)
TIME Magazine -- The boldest theater in the U.S. may be in your own
town. Our picks for America's Best Regional Theaters
By Richard Zoglin
By the time the eco-terrorists show up - a band of tree sitters, with
names like Lynx and Aquarius and Smokebomb, who drop from the skies,
rappelling down the trunks of a redwood grove onstage - your head is
already spinning. Daughters of the Revolution, one-half of David Edgar's
two-play cycle about an American political campaign called Continental
Divide, has mostly been talk up to this point. But what talk! The play
has nearly 50 characters, rapid-fire dialogue and an impossibly complicated
plot involving leftover '60s radicals, skeletons in the closet, the
clash between ideals and pragmatism in politics, and a hot-button ballot
initiative that would mandate loyalty oaths for all voters. And that's
only half the story. Daughters of the Revolution centers on the Democratic
side of a gubernatorial race in an unnamed Western state; its companion
play, Mothers Against, focuses on the Republican side. In all, it's
six hours of dense, unruly, sometimes maddening, always engrossing drama.
And you have to go to Oregon to see it.
Continental Divide, currently being given its world premiere
at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland (in a coproduction with
California's Berkeley Repertory Theater, which will mount it later this
year), is just the latest sign that challenging American theater is
alive and well and nowhere near Broadway.
It's hardly news, of course, that theaters beyond the
Hudson River are doing good work. Or that many of the plays that wind
up on Broadway and off Broadway get their start at regional theaters.
Nor should it be a surprise (though it was) that this year's Pulitzer
Prize for drama went to a play most of New York City's tastemakers had
never even heard of: Cuban-born playwright Nilo Cruz's Anna in the Tropics,
which had been produced only at the 104-seat New Theater in Coral Gables,
Fla.
What isn't so apparent - until you spend some time, as
I did over the past few months, surveying regional theaters across the
country - is that these companies are pursuing whole chunks of the repertory
that New York, with its commercial pressures and unforgiving critics,
largely ignores. And local audiences are getting a better taste of the
possibilities of theater than most New Yorkers get in an entire season.
The plays that succeed on and off Broadway these days are, as a rule,
small things: two-and three-character relationship dramas (those big
casts cost money!); minimalist exercises in craftsmanship; tidy little
plays that convert big subjects into manageable private dramas (Proof,
Copenhagen, How I Learned to Drive, to name just a few recent award
winners). Plays of epic size and scope, works that examine American
history and the American experience, plays that attempt to engage the
audience in social and political issues - for those, mostly, you've
got to look in the hinterlands.
A couple of years ago, for example, a San Francisco playwright
named Joan Holden had the somewhat unpromising notion of turning Nickel
and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich's best-selling book about her experiences
as a minimum-wage worker, into a stage play. The result is an episodic
but incisive series of vignettes about the impossibility of making ends
meet while waiting tables in Florida, scrubbing toilets in Maine and
stocking discount-store shelves in Minnesota. Nickel & Dimed has
its deficiencies as drama, but it's a rare example of theater that tries
to open people's eyes to the way life is lived in the real world - and
maybe even rouse them to action. Midway through the second act, the
actors step out of character, stop the play and conduct a 10-minute
discussion with the audience on how much a cleaning woman deserves to
be paid. Producers in New York haven't given it much attention, but
Nickel & Dimed is making a successful march through the regionals,
from Seattle to the Trinity Rep in Providence, R.I.
In Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Repertory Theater last fall
presented writer-director Eric Simonson's big, imaginatively staged
adaptation of Moby Dick; there was no whale, but a surprising amount
of Herman Melville's imposing novel made it onstage. (Adaptations of
epic novels, like John Irving's Cider House Rules, have a habit of flopping
in New York.) Houston's enterprising Alley Theater last fall staged
a fine production of The General from America, Richard Nelson's brooding,
against-the-grain, surprisingly convincing historical drama about Benedict
Arnold. (The play later opened off-Broadway, where the critics, predictably,
dissed it.)
"Our responsibility is to do big stuff - not the
next one-set, three-character play," says Gregory Boyd, artistic
director of the Alley, which has commissioned, among other new works,
a play from Keith Reddin about the Luddite rebellion in 19th century
England. Regional theaters are one place where educational is not a
dirty word. Performances are often followed by discussion sessions;
the programs (so pathetically inadequate in New York) are filled with
background articles on the play's issues or real-life subject matter.
People leave the theater with something more than stagecraft to talk
about.
Even with more commercial works that play the regionals
with one eye on the ultimate prize - Broadway - the audience participates
in a more direct way. Last winter Ellen Burstyn played the title role
in Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All, a one-woman stage adaptation
of Allan Gurganus' best-selling novel, which had its world premiere
at San Diego's Old Globe Theater. She was still stumbling a bit (engagingly,
catching herself with a casual "I mean ...") as she tried
to master the demanding part, but audiences had the frisson of being
present at the development of what may (when the show comes to Broadway
this fall) turn out to be one of the great stage roles.
By most measures, the regional theaters are booming. There
were just 23 in 1961, when the first national organization of nonprofit
theaters was formed; today there are 1,800. Many have gleaming new theaters,
with two or even three stages, and state-of-the-art production facilities
that put to shame the cramped old boxes on Broadway. "Frankly,
it's something of a step down for me when I go to New York," says
Jack O'Brien, artistic director of San Diego's Globe Theaters - who
has lately been going to New York often to direct hit shows like Hairspray.
For playwrights, the chance to see their new work given
a sumptuous first staging is matched only by the ability to keep tinkering
with it while shielded from the harsh lights of Broadway. "One
of the things you find is that there's a low level of audience pretension,"
says Richard Greenberg, who has developed plays like Three Days of Rain
and The Violet Hour at South Coast Repertory in California's Orange
County. "There's a receptiveness about the audience. Their responses
are pure. And that's especially good early on, when you're not so sure
how or if your play is communicating."
Today's tough economic times have brought their share
of pain, of course. Subscriptions and ticket sales have held their own
at most of the major theaters (though advance bookings have dropped,
as they have on Broadway since Sept. 11), but it has been a struggle
to keep corporate and private donations coming. Seattle's ACT company,
one of the city's three major theater groups, announced last winter
that financial woes would force it to close down at the end of the season
- before $1.5 million was raised at the last minute to keep it going
for at least another season. The Seattle Rep, across town, is in less
dire straits, but will still have to reduce staff and cut its roster
of plays from nine to six next season. These pressures could increase
the danger that regionals will shy away from risky fare, in favor of
tried-and-true revivals, or new works that might have the prospect of
a commercial run in New York. That is a criticism that some have long
made of the regionals; off-Broadway is still a more receptive place
for certain kinds of stylistically experimental plays. "I find
that sometimes theaters are a little tame when it comes to choosing
their seasons. They want to cater to their audiences," says playwright
Cruz. "A lot of regional theaters won't take chances with work
that deals more with experimentation."
A successful regional theater, of course, has to strike the right balance,
to know its audience and serve its tastes while pushing it, at least
on occasion, into new territory. What's gratifying is how well many
of them are doing it - and proving in the process that all the country's
a stage.
The Top Five Regional Theaters
Some focus on new work; others have a commitment to the classics. Bringing
new plays and artists to the national stage is important, but so is
serving your local audience. TIME traveled the country to find the five
theaters that do both best - and know how to put on a great show.
1
Goodman Theater, Chicago
With the groundbreaking Steppenwolf troupe and such ambitious smaller
companies as the Victory Gardens Theater, Chicago's theater scene is
lively. But the Goodman continues to make the biggest national mark.
Artistic director Robert Falls has supplied Broadway with acclaimed
adaptations of American classics (including this season's Long Day's
Journey into Night) and has nurtured such important new voices as Rebecca
Gilman (Boy Gets Girl) and - along with Chicago's Lookingglass Theater
- Mary Zimmerman (Metamorphoses). The Goodman is currently introducing
Gem of the Ocean, above, the latest in August Wilson's 20th century
chronicle of the African-American experience, in a vibrant production
with a strong cast of Wilson regulars. And Stephen Sondheim's long-awaited
new musical, Bounce, will open here in June. "New York is a place
to celebrate new work rather than to originate or nurture it,"
says Falls. "That's our responsibility."
2
Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland, Ore.
The name is misleading. Although the company began as an all-Shakespeare
troupe back in 1935, the Bard's works now constitute less than half
of its increasingly eclectic season. OSF is one of the few U.S. companies
left that hew to the classic repertory format. Its 70 to 75 actors take
various roles in 11 works that play in rotation from February to November.
And since visitors generally travel to this Oregon resort town to see
several shows at a time, the Romeo and Juliets and Hedda Gablers can
be supplemented with more unconventional fare such as the two parts
of David Edgar's Continental Divide (one of them, Mothers Against, below)
and, in July, Nilo Cruz's Lorca in a Green Dress. "We're willing
to take a chance on plays that other theaters aren't interested in,"
says artistic director Libby Appel, "because we have the audience
for it."
3
American Repertory Theater, Cambridge, Mass.
Robert Brustein, the longtime artistic director of this adventurous
company, turned over the reins this season to Robert Woodruff, a veteran
avant-garde director from New York City. Woodruff responded by bringing
in a Who's Who of theater innovators, including Peter Sellars and Andrei
Serban, whose quirky take on Shakespeare's Pericles, right, is currently
onstage. Another highlight of the season:Woodruff's staging of Highway
Ulysses, an update of the Ulysses myth, with text and music by Rinde
Eckert, about a man on a freaky cross-country trek in search of his
son. Even when the journey wandered, Woodruff's teeming, haunted stage
kept you enthralled.
4
Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis
One of the legendary American regional companies has been quietly tending
its garden for years, with 32,000 subscribers (among the highest in
the nation) who brave the frigid Minnesota winters to see high-quality
productions of the classics. But the Guthrie has also launched a program
for developing new work, and last summer staged the world premiere of
Arthur Miller's latest play, Resurrection Blues, above. Artistic director
Joe Dowling, who once ran Dublin's Abbey Theater and directed a Broadway
revival of Tartuffe this season, says that the audience in Minneapolis
is "one of the most sophisticated I've ever worked with."
5
South Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa, Calif.
In Southern California, enterprising regional theaters are nearly as
plentiful as orange groves - among them, San Diego's Globe and the La
Jolla Playhouse - but the little engine that could in Orange County
gets the nod. Run by two former San Francisco college buddies - Martin
Benson and David Emmes, who founded the company as a traveling troupe
in 1964--the South Coast Rep has helped nurture such playwrights as
Richard Greenberg and David Henry Hwang (Golden Child). This spring
the theater, along with Baltimore's Center Stage, staged the premiere
of Lynn Nottage's Intimate Apparel, right, about a black seamstress
in turn-of-the-century New York City who makes corsets for rich ladies
- and a mail-order match for herself with a laborer on the Panama Canal.
It's a lovingly rendered slice of the American story that seems to glow
especially bright in the heart of Reagan country.
- With reporting by Amy Lennard Goehner