One of the things I like to do after seeing a play, or less
often a movie, is to go on the Internet, to find out how eminent critics
reacted to what I myself had recently experienced.
Why do I do that? I
am not exactly sure. I realize that
reactions to artistic endeavors are inevitably subjective. I mean, I know it’s not math.
“I got ‘seventy-one, remainder two.’”
“The correct answer is ‘one hundred and twenty-seven,
remainder six.’”
In mathematics, you always know where you stand. Everyone gets the same answer… except the
people who get it wrong. Some of them, I
suppose, could have imaginably gotten the same answer as well, but it would
have been equally incorrect. Though
they’d have made interesting company – kindred spirits in mathematical
inaccuracy.
With plays and other artistic endeavors it’s different. “Chacun
a son gout…” as they say. “One man’s
meat is another man’s…something bearing not the slightest resemblance to meat
whatsoever and could actually kill you.”
“Everyone’s entitled to their opinion.” Which is fine. Except…
What if those opinions are not all equally accurate?
You have hit shows, you have hit movies. “The
Critics Agree!!!” (Which, you will
notice, is never followed by, “They
all think it stinks!”) Though still an
artistic endeavor, there is no random distribution of reactions. The vast majority is in demonstrable
agreement.
I am not concerned with the populace at large. I mean, look what they did when we mistakenly
gave them the vote. I refer instead to the
authoritative critics, people making their livings telling regular people what
to think. Although far from mathematical
unanimity, the critics may, in some
evaluations, be in virtual agreement.
Okay.
So we go see The
Beauty Queen of Leenane by Martin McDonagh, whom Wikipedia calls “one of the most important living Irish
playwrights”, though the way Wikipedia
works, anyone could have put that in
there. Possibly even Martin McDonagh. And its continuing presence suggests he did not insist that they take it out.
A tyrannically controlling mother and a fortyish (what they
used to call) spinster duke in out in a remote, rain-drenched Irish hovel. Fine. At least it’s not an Irish play about “De
Troobles.” There’ll be nobody coomin’ to
the door announcin’ that their I.R.A-sympathizing boyo’s been “mordered” by de blewdy
Brettish. Which is a relief, at least to
one anonymous squeamish theatergoer.
The first act, for me – and
for my mercifully likeminded marital companion – goes smoothly enough, if you
exclude our struggling difficulty deciphering the impenetrable Galway
dialect. Where is “Closed Captioning”
when you need it?
Act One follows the appropriate roadmap. Mother and daughter go at it hammer and
tongs, a possible suitor arrives on the scene threatening to muck up the symbiotic
relationship and we’re off to the races.
The dialogue is sharp and mordantly funny. The ensemble acting is wonderful. The intermission’s on time, by which I mean a
scene ends and I think, “The lights should go on now”, and they do.
The show is fine and everyone’s happy.
You come back for Act Two, and after a promising beginning –
an exquisitely written monolog letter recitation – it’s like the writer had a
doctor’s appointment and had to polish things off quickly before dashing away. I mean, start to finish, what we’ve got here is
a cliché. But now, everything suddenly feels
rushed, or glossed over, or unrealistic or shockingly thin. The story points are all covered, but it is
only a veneer.
Where the first act at least engaged us with its splendid
acting and seemingly accurate repartee – though an actual resident might
complain, “It’s a bit mooch, I’d be thinkin’” – the second act felt like a staged
outline, the writer imagining he would flesh things out later but is
subsequently persuaded – or persuaded himself
– he was finished.
Final Evaluation:
A long drive for not all that mooch.
We come home. I go to
the computer. I type in, “New York Times Beauty Queen of Leenane review.” And there it is, written by Ben Brantley, jefe of the Times theatrical reviewing constituency.
Out-of-context extractions, although easily construed:
“stunning new play… a
proper, perfectly plotted drama that sets out, above all, to tell a story as
convincingly and disarmingly as possible… nearly everything feels organic, an
inevitable outgrowth of character and environment… there’s not a single hole in
the play’s structural or emotional logic, and yet it constantly surprises…”
Are we talking about the same play? Everything happened that I expected to
happen, some of it in too great of a hurry.
The play is virtually a satire of the genre. (Spoiler Alert: The monster mother does not do in the frustrated daughter.)
McDonagh wrote his first play Beauty Queen when he was twenty-seven years old. But instead of “Promising debut; keep going”,
the critics lauded him to the heavens, catapulting him to instantaneous success.
(Note: L.A. Times theater critic, Charles
McNulty, while praising McDonagh as a “wicked dramatic stylist” admitting about
the original production, “I was not among its ardent champions” discovers that
the current production “has not convinced me that I missed the boat the first
time around”, making him a qualified naysayer but, knowing he is massively
outnumbered, almost apologetic about saying nay.)
People in large numbers – highly regarded people at that –
see something exciting where you don’t.
Makes you want to Windex your evaluative bifocals. While residually wondering who exactly got
things closer to the truth.
I know it’s not math.
But can one person’s “black” really be another one’s
“luminous white”?
The play is “waffer thin”, I tell you.
But that is apparently a minority opinion.
1 comment:
You are not alone. I remember seeing this play years ago, here in Toronto, where we find the brogues and lilts easier to comprehend, and that still didn't help. All I can remember about the play is the title and the fact that I didn't see what the fuss was about.
Many people can be wrong about something.....
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