Yale Repertory Theatre. New Haven, Connecticut, 2023-24
Martha Schmoyer LoMonaco, emerita
Fairfield University
By
Published on
December 16, 2024
Yale Rep’s The Far Country.
Photo: T. Charles Erickson
Wish You Were Here Sanaz Toossi (5-28 Oct)
The Salvagers Harrison David Rivers (24 Nov-16 Dec., world premiere)
Escaped Alone Carol Churchill (8-30 Mar)
The Far Country Lloyd Suh (26 Apr-18 May)
Yale Rep enjoyed its first normal season since the COVID pandemic shuttered its doors for almost a full two years, from February 2020 through January 2022. This season, for the first time, audiences were not required to wear masks, and it is clear that Yale is still re-thinking and re-inventing the way it produces theatre, following its September 2021 declaration “to advance anti-racist training and production by focusing on the well-being of the School of Drama/Yale Rep community, increasing emphasis on process and quality and decreasing emphasis on product and quantity.” All production choices, from scripts through casting and artistic leadership, reflected a determination to make work by and for a diverse a range of people. Yale also hired, rehearsed, and gave full playbill credit, with printed biographies, to an Understudy Cast for each show, thus providing a safety net for the principal actors along with opportunities for more actors to embody these roles.
Yale had a spectacular season opening with Sanaz Toossi’s Wish You Were Here about six Iranian women friends preparing each other for marriage and new lives between 1978 and 1991, a period of political and cultural upheaval in Iran. The stellar cast and artistic leaders—playwright, director, and scenic designer—were largely Iranian American and not previously affiliated with Yale, unusual for Rep productions. They also were deeply committed to the Woman Life Freedom movement (womanlifefreedom.today) and on opening night, the actors returned to the stage to share scripted remarks on gender discrimination and inequality in Iran in a post-show commentary that reinforced the major themes of the play. The flexible set, by Iranian scenic designer Omid Akbari, featured a large living room with handsome, over-sized white furniture and a prominent upstage wall with Islamic geometric patterning to suggest the upper-class status of the characters; the set would transform to signal the rise in social turmoil over time. All six actors gave robust performances as women whose lives revolve around their deep, passionate friendships, made manifest through verbal and physical intimacies. They loved talking about penises, their “pussies,” and body hair (in one scene Nazanin, the lead character, was shaving her legs with wax, which she unsuccessfully tried to get her friend to rip off) and enjoyed caressing each other with impunity. The play provides a fascinating window into the lives of these women, largely cut off from the world through religious and social strictures, who are most alive through their interactions with each other.
The world premiere of Harrison David Rivers’s The Salvagers, commissioned by Yale Rep and developed and supported by Yale’s Binger Center for New Theatre, opened in late November. The script centers around Boseman Salvage Senior and Boseman Salvage Junior, an estranged father and son who are only 14 years apart in age, Junior being the product of a teenaged couple, now divorced, and the three women in their lives: Junior’s mail-carrier mother, Nedra; his co-worker and potential love interest, Paulina; and Senior’s current lady, Elinor, a substitute teacher. It was a difficult show to sit through; despite strong performances by the all Black cast, the characters were largely unsympathetic as they allowed their unhappiness and frustration to erupt in a steady stream of invective and angry outbursts. There were some interesting visuals, which are a hallmark of Yale Rep’s shows, created by current students and faculty in the David Geffen School of Drama’s excellent design and theatre technology programs. The Salvagers is set in Chicago and the famous elevated trains, which Junior rides to and from his job daily, were theatrically realized by intricate lighting on passenger seats moving on tracks back and forth across the stage. Junior also spent a lot of time shoveling snow and it was fascinating to witness falling snow being scooped up and traveling airborne through the set.
Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone, set in a classic English backyard garden, beautifully designed by Lia Tubiana, focuses on the quotidian conversations of four British women in their 70s, according to a textual note by Churchill, enjoying camaraderie as they sip afternoon tea. Mrs. Jarrett, played by African American actor LaTonya Borsay in a bit of non-traditional casting, abruptly launched into monologues about the coming apocalypse, rendered scenographically through dramatic shifts of time, space, and environment with lighting, designed by Stephen Strawbridge, projections by Shawn Lovell-Boyle, and sound by Sinan Refik Zafar. Eventually the three other women, ably performed by Mary Lou Rosato, Sandra Shipley, and Rita Wolf, also are afforded monologues to express their own fears and insecurities. The one-hour play veered from idle chatter to moments of hilarity, as when they broke into a rousing rendition of Ray Charles’s “Hit the Road Jack,” to expressions of disquiet and uncertainty, a feeling that eventually permeated the entire theatre. Escaped Alone left us with more questions than answers, which, one suspects, was precisely Churchill’s intent.
Lloyd Suh’s The Far Country deals with Chinese immigrants stranded at a detention center on Angel Island in San Francisco harbor, with little hope of attaining the U.S. citizenship they so fervently desire. The action bounces back and forth between Guangdong Province, China, and Angel Island, both stunningly rendered by Kim Zhou (scenery), Yichen Zhou (lighting), and Hana S. Kim (projections). The mostly Asian American acting company, especially Tina Chilip and Hao Feng as the mother and son at the center of the tale, did a superb job under the sensitive direction of Ralph B. Peña. It’s a talky play set in the early 20th century that unveils sanctioned racial bigotry under the Chinese Exclusion Act, in force from 1882 until the mid-1960s.
Next season, the Rep will expand its offerings to five shows: the world premiere of Falcon Girls by Hilary Bettis; Whitney White’s Macbeth in Stride, a co-production of The Philadelphia Theatre Company, Shakespeare Theatre Company, and Brooklyn Academy of Music; Eden by Steve Carter; a new adaptation of Nikolai Gogol’s The Inspector by Yura Kordonsky; and Notes on Killing Seven Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Board Members by Mara Vélez Meléndez.
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References
About The Authors
Martha S. LoMonaco is a theatre director, historian, and writer. She is Professor Emerita of Theatre and American Studies at Fairfield University, where she was resident director and ran the theatre program for thirty-four years. She is the author of two monographs Every Week, A Broadway Revue: The Tamiment Playhouse, 1921-1960 and Summer Stock: An American Theatrical Phenomenon (Choice 2004 Outstanding Academic Title) and an edited collection, Theatre Exhibitions, volume thirty-three of Performing Arts Resources. She has been editor of New England Theatre in Review since 2010. Marti holds a doctorate in Performance Studies from New York University.
JADT publishes thoughtful and innovative work by leading scholars on theatre, drama, and performance in the Americas – past and present. Provocative articles provide valuable insight and information on the heritage of American theatre, as well as its continuing contribution to world literature and the performing arts. Founded in 1989 and previously edited by Professors Vera Mowry Roberts, Jane Bowers, and David Savran, this widely acclaimed peer reviewed journal is now edited by Dr. Benjamin Gillespie and Dr. Bess Rowen.
Journal of American Drama and Theatre is a publication of the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center.