[NEohioPAL] Berko review: DIVIDING THE ESTATE @ Ensemble Theatre

Roy Berko royberko at yahoo.com
Sun Nov 21 19:49:15 PST 2010


DIVIDING THE ESTATE, a lesson in good Southern storytelling

Roy Berko

(Member, American Theatre Critics Association)

--THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS--
Lorain County Times--Westlaker Times--Lakewood News Times--Olmsted-Fairview 
Times

--COOLCLEVELAND.COM-

Humans are storytellers.  We tell tales to set patterns for our cultures, to 
have family continuity, to create histories and retain traditions.  

In the US American culture, some of the best story tellers are southern.  This 
may well be because of the sense of community, the large African American 
population whose traditions include oral story telling, and the commonality of a 
unified history concerning slavery, class standing and privilege.  Writers like 
Mark Twain, William Faulkner, Robert Penn Warren, Eudora Welty and Harper Lee 
come to mind.  

The story telling southern tradition also gave birth to such playwrights as 
Lillian Hellman, Alfred Uhry, Tennessee Williams and Horton Foote.  Foote's 
DIVIDING THE ESTATE is now being staged by Ensemble Theatre.

Foote is at his best when he is dissecting the emotional dynamics of southern 
townsfolk.   His DIVIDING THE ESTATE is Foote at his writing best.  He creates a 
tale of a formerly wealthy and landed family, with a questionable history, whose 
privilege is evaporating in the change of the economic climate.  Family 
squabbling and squawking emerge as the Gordon clan realizes that life, as they 
know it, is quickly being extinguished.  Much like the message of Chekov's THE 
CHERRY ORCHARD, Foote's subjects are mostly obtuse to the changes that are 
taking place, often living in a fantasy world of their own design.

Its Harrison, Texas.  Three generations of malcontents pass the time in Southern 
style, drinking iced tea and hard liquor, gossiping, sparring and infighting 
over money and life styles.  Interestingly, though the play takes place in 1987, 
it is relevant today. 

The Gordons, ruled by Stella, a mentally failing octogenarian matriarch, are 
totally unprepared for the reality of an uncertain future when plunging real 
estate values and an unexpected tax bill have a negative impact on the family 
fortune.  Stella's children--predatory Mary Jo, complacent Lucille, and 
alcoholic Lewis--engage in a debate about whether or not they should divide the 
estate while their mother is still alive in order to ensure themselves financial 
independence.  When reality hits, all the pretenses go flying out the window.

Ensemble's production, under the watchful eye of Sarah May, effectively milks 
Foote's very southern context.  Accents are on target, pacing generally good, 
ideas develop clearly, and the major characters are well textured.  Forced to 
move a huge cast around the postage stamped Brook's theatre stage, is a major 
chore, which is not always accomplished, especially when we are supposed to be 
observing a grand, though tired, southern mansion.  There is often a feeling of 
confinement which doesn't fit the message.  There are also line stumbles which, 
hopefully, during the run of the show disappear.

Strong performances are given by Bernice Bolek as Stella, the matriarch who 
refuses to accept change is a comin'.  Robert Hawkes, as the alcoholic Lewis, 
walks the fine line between reality and drunkenness with finesse.  Anne McEvoy 
makes daughter Lucille a real person, who is one of the few who grasps reality.  
Valerie Young is so successful as the self-centered Mary Jo, that I wanted to 
jump on stage and, in good old southern fashion, give her a “womp upside her 
h'ad.”  Gregory White is compelling as Doug, the 90-something year old servant.  
The rest of the cast varies from proficient to acceptable.

Given the constraints of the minute stage size, scenic designer Ron Newell 
justifiably goes for grand furniture rather than massive set.

CAPSULE JUDGEMENT:  If you like a well-written story about fading southern 
gentility, filled with some laughs and clear characterizations, you'll enjoy 
Horton Foote's DIVIDING THE ESTATE.

DIVIDING THE ESTATE runs through December 12 at the Brooks Theatre of the 
Cleveland Play House.  For tickets call 216-321-2930 or go online to 
www.ensemble-theatre.org 
 
Roy Berko's blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2001 through 
2010, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at 
http://royberko.info.  His reviews can also be found on www.coolcleveland.com 
and www.NeOHIOpal



      



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