[NEohioPAL] Review of "The Gin Game" at CVLT
Bob Abelman
r.abelman at adelphia.net
Mon Apr 23 10:21:16 PDT 2012
CVLT's 'The Gin Game' called for a misdeal
Bob Abelman
News-Herald, Chagrin Valley Times, Solon Times,
The Morning Journal, Geauga Times Courier
Member, American Theatre Critics Association
This review will appear in the Times papers on 4/26/12
On the surface, D.L. Coburn's "The Gin Game" appears to be a simple, four-scene play about two elderly people playing cards at a run-down nursing home. There is, of course, so much more to this Pulitzer Prize-winning drama, but none of it is realized in the current Chagrin Valley Little Theatre production.
This play is built in layers. When Fonsia Dorsey first meets and is cajoled into playing gin with Weller Martin, he saves her from the melancholy of being a new resident and she rescues him from residents he deems too old, too sick and too dull. As they become companions and increasingly disclose about their lives, their true natures progressively rise to the surface. His cantankerous charm gives way to impatience and then pent-up frustration and bitter rage. Her proper and conservative façade erodes to reveal a subtle but eventually maddening needling.
In this CVLT production, featuring Linda Ryan as Fonsia and Steve Ryan as Weller, there are no layers, there is no progression, and no revelation occurs.
The preview night performances of these actors are flat from the start and remained that way to the finish. Their characters' unrelenting psychological battle is little more than tepid exchanges, and their careless card playing does little to facilitate the rhythms so important to this play. Little is done to inspire the comedy that is peppered throughout the script or justify Fonsia's comments that Weller has a "sarcastic streak" and "wonderful sense of humor." Even less rouses or sustains the play's drama.
"The Gin Game's" pedigree should have alerted Eric Oswald to the complexities that lie beneath the seemingly simple storyline and informed his stage direction. After all, the 1977 Broadway production starred the legendary Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, and garnered Tony Award nominations for Best Play, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Director. In 1997, the play was revived on Broadway, starring Charles Durning and Julie Harris, and was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Production of a Revival. Cleveland royalty Reuben and Dorothy Silver were in the 1994 and 2001 Ensemble Theater productions. Talent like this is not attracted to simple storytelling.
The Ryans are certainly capable of better work, as their performances in last year's CVLT production of "Bloody Murder" attests. And perhaps this production of "The Gin Game" will find more substantial footing with each performance. Last week, however, it was playing a losing hand.
"The Gin Game" continues through May 5 at the Chagrin Valley Little Theatre's River Street Playhouse, 40 River Street, Chagrin Falls. For tickets, which are $10, call 440-247-8955 or visit www.cvlt.org.
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