Every Brilliant Thing

This is a reprint of my remarks about “Every Brilliant Thing” at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater presented in their Stiemke Studio during the 2018 – 2019 season. This originally appeared on my Facebook timeline on April 22, 2019!

Every once in a while the theater presents you with a gem that you weren’t quite expecting. Duncan Macmillan’s Every Brilliant Thing turned out to be that surprise this season. Not originally on my subscription list, I attended under the auspices of the Rep’s Social Media Club! (Thank your SMC)

Although this is technically a one actor play, with the brilliant Scott Greer in the lead role, this play supports the proposition that it takes a village to perform a play! Sounds silly? Well the stage is a Persian rug dead center with the resulting theater in the round allowing the audience to partake…as either the Vet or Dad or the school counselor or the fiancé/wife. Unscripted parts prompted by Mr. Greer. And then there’s the call and response throughout recounting the list of Every Brilliant Thing. Violations all of the fourth wall that brings the serious nature of the play’s subject matter down a notch and insures everyone present is fulling engaged every moment. So if you attend and Mr. Greer offers you a card to read before the show starts…take it! You will not regret it.

Some of the preview information that I had read suggested that there were two characters here despite there being only the one acting role. And at first I thought the second character was the audience…but that’s just not right at all.

The storyline involves the lead character’s dance through life…and it’s funny and sad and a bit depressing at different turns and moments. And keep that word depressing in the back of your mind.

The first remembrances relate to his childhood and the depression suffered by his mother and her initial (and unsuccessful) attempt to kill herself. And his ‘life saving’ measure of inventing a list of every brilliant thing to share with his mother. And as his life grows…the list grows…and goes from supporting his efforts to support his mother…to supporting himself.

So that second character? That depends. At first I thought it was his mother. She is prominent and her struggles can weigh heavy on the plot. But I think it shifts to the list of Every Brilliant Thing as it rapidly takes on a life of its own and approaches a million things. But as the lead enters full on adulthood we realize it is depression. Unseen but not unspoken and certainly not unfelt.

There are a lot of joyous events recounted…some decidedly sad ones…and discussions of family dynamics and the little things that we learn about one another…and the tells that help guide our responses…even with those we love.

And Kudos to the Stiemke Theater itself for transforming from a traditional proscenium type to a three sided auditorium with the jewel box stage in the fourth corner to a theater in the round this season!!!

There are after play discussions about mental health topics for those who have the time or inclination to attend…participation is not required.

This runs through May 5th…so there is still time to catch it and it will be worth your while.

Things I Know To Be True

This is a reprint of my remarks about “Thinks I Know To Be True” at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater presented in their main stage Quadracci Powerhouse during the 2018 – 2019 season. This originally appeared on my Facebook timeline on or about March 31, 2019!

I wasn’t paying attention and I apologize. As part of the Milwaukee Rep’s Social Media Club, I am supposed to write about my reactions to the plays as the season progresses. Now the SMC gets seats for the first weekend of a play’s run but I also have a subscription. So sometimes I had the Rep move my tickets earlier in the run but because of other events, I used my regular tickets for Things I Know To Be True. But there are now only TWO performances left: They are both TODAY March 31: 2:00 PM Matinee and the final performance at 7:00 PM. So if after reading this, you had better call for tickets!!

I was warned by friends that this play would make me laugh and make me cry. And it did…at times when I didn’t expect it and at times when I did…and too often (for my eyes not for the drama) it moved from one to the other without warning. So we have a family…30 years in development…solid middle class blue collar Midwestern family (rewritten for the Midwest by the way). Four kids…two of each…and the big themes of life and love and family and kids and home and death. The children are all ‘adults’ and all in various stages of launched but keep home as a touchstone in their own ways. We know these people…some of us are these people. And that’s why we can laugh and cry and love the characters so readily.

The events and timelines here are very very 21st Century…and although this much action wouldn’t happen within a single family…it all would play out across all of our families. I am trying to avoid giving too much away. But we see the power dynamics between spouses…the changing rhythms in relationships…the struggle to be an individual without losing the sense of family…and we will recognize it all…and laugh and cry and understand.

The actors are all amazing and there is no way you don’t believe that they are their characters…even as those characters transform…and you love them all at different points in the play. The parents are early 60’s age…my peers…or at least my younger siblings’ peers and the children mostly millennial…so it is very contemporary. The only quibble I have is the parents’ viewpoint…it was a mix of my feeling as a parent but sometimes it seemed more in keeping with my parents’ generation. Maybe I am reading too much into that or maybe it got lost in the translation from the Australian.

When does your childhood end (and unspoken: does parenthood ever end?)

The Chinese Lady

This is a reprint of my remarks about “The Chinese Lady” at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater presented in their Stiemke Studio during the 2018 – 2019 season. This originally appeared on my Facebook timeline on March 6, 2019!

Spoiler alert! I am putting that out front here just in case. I may not actually spoil anything but I don’t know how to tell my story about my experience with The Chinese Lady and have to worry about whether I am giving too much away!

Over the years I have always found the plays at The Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s Stiemke Theater to be their most challenging and thought provoking each and every season. So I have made it a point to make sure I see all of them even when I can’t make the rest of the Rep’s season.

So it was with great expectations that I attended their presentation of The Chinese Lady and I am delighted with it. It’s based on a true story of the first female Chinese immigrant to the United States.  Afong Moy was brought here as a Chinese curiosity to demonstrate and display other Chinese curiosities, namely Chinese household items that the American public could purchase from her ‘employer’. And I have employer in parentheses because she was brought here under a ‘contract’ with her father with the intention she would return home. But instead she remained in America as a side show attraction for decades and it isn’t known if she ever returned to China.

The Chinese Lady only features two roles. Lisa Helmi Johanson as Afong Moy and Jon Norman Schneider as Atung. Atung is also in the employ of the American importers and acts as Ms. Moy’s interpreter and protector.

The Rep did away with the traditional stage in the black box theater and presents Ms. Moy in a giant version of a literal black lacquer Chinese box that Atung opens to expose the wonderful exotic items within. The box that will be her stage throughout and essentially her prison in life. A place where Americans pay to see the exotic woman and her exotic environs and her exotic traditions.

And the structure of the play works a bit differently too. Usually if a play features an aside, where a character speaks directly to the audience, it is usually to reveal a secret, fill in a fact, or progress the story further down the timeline. But in The Chinese Lady…most all of the play is an aside. Ms. May and Atung address the audience directly throughout most of the play. When they do speak to each other, those interludes act as the asides and expose those secrets or surprises or fill in context that they can’t provide directly to us…because they aren’t always known to each other until they are spoken.

One of the points where words have multiple meanings as we live through the play…early on Ms. Moy breaks the artifice of the stage by stating her dress wasn’t hers…her body wasn’t hers…which is true for the character…the physicality belongs to the actress although we are supposed to suspend disbelief and accept the character as real. But even the character experiences this dress isn’t hers…this body isn’t hers…it belongs to the importers who brought her from China. And it becomes even less her own possession as she ages and loses her native language skills, her memories of China, and the life she should have been able to forge for herself. It runs from hopeful to sad to tragic in the end.

And as she repeats rituals throughout, we watch Ms. Moy mature and turn from the hopeful 14 year old youth into a mature world wise woman. Ms. Johanson does an incredible job of portraying that growth and awareness beyond just the scenic and costume changes. And Mr. Schneider identifies his concurrent aging process without the benefit of a costume change. They both excel in their roles.

The playwright, Lloyd Suh has crafted a marvelous play where words carry meaning beyond their apparent message…particularly as other meanings come to light later in the play. And it is a play that speaks to today…but demonstrates that we didn’t get here in a vacuum and lays out that path that got us to 2019. It isn’t as pretty as we pretend it to be and the characters let us know that. My one quibble here…after fashioning a view of the world and an amazing play that tricks us down its own path…he sums up the ending too quickly, too forcefully, and of course too uncomfortably. But this is the one play this season that I intend to see again before it ends it run.

So…The Chinese Lady will be at the Stiemke through March 24…so there’s time to see it…but not that much time…so hurry! And there are NO bad seats in the Stiemke!!!