When a lion tamer steps into the cage, you gotta give them
credit, even though the
assembled lions are less than perfectly synchronized,
rearing up on their hind legs and clawing the air.
LION NUMBER ONE: “You gotta hand it to them. We’re pretty ferocious.”
LION NUMBER TWO:
“That whip gets much closer and I’m taking off his arm.”
LION NUMBER THREE:
“Frankly, I never understood the chair.”
Whether you respect their profession or not – and a lot
people believe that animals have no place in a circus – though I defy you to
show me where other professions are
stepping up to the plate and offering them alternate avenues of employment. Although I am not entirely certain I blame
them: “Can you handle an ‘Excel’
Spreadsheet?” LION JOB APPLICANT: “What’s that?” – you have to admit that “lion tamer” is an
impressible and challenging gig.
Now here’s where I hypothesize, and I may not be correct,
though I do not see why I wouldn’t
be, as I have thoroughly thought this through.
I imagine that, like with anything else you can think of –
and therefore why should this arena
be an exception – lion tamers come in two separate and distinguishable
categories: There are lion tamers who
are “naturals” - born lion tamers, if
you will – and lion tamers who capably “know the ropes”, and they try hard –
and it would take a real lion taming aficionado to detect the difference – but
they do not generically – or is it genetically – have the knack. (And the lions instinctively sense that. You see them checking their messages while
these persistent wannabes attempt desperately to command their attention. As Rodney Dangerfield used to say, “No
respect. No respect at all.”)
The distinction between the naturals and the “not-born-to-its”
may be virtually negligible. But even
the layperson can intuit which is which.
One sends you home feeling exhilarated;
the other – you may not be able to
put your finger on it – but you somehow feel that something meaningful was
missing. Especially if they do get too close with the whip, and the insurgent
lion wasn’t bluffing about the arm.
Now, you might think – and I can easily understand why –
that this blog post is about lion taming, because that’s all I’ve been talking
about. But, in actuality, it is not. What is it actually about?
Annette Bening.
Surprise!
“This guy’s
great, isn’t he?”
Thank you. We recently saw Annette Bening in a one-woman
show, portraying renowned comedy monologist Ruth Draper, whose performing
heyday spanned the pre to post World War
I era and the 1920’s (That was not
the most proficient job of “spanning”; and for that, I most humbly apologize.)
More
specifically, Ruth Draper was a “monodramatist”, acting out a series of twenty-minute-or-so
vignettes in which she hilariously lampoons identifiable characters, invariably
members of the ”Comfortable Class” of that particular era.
The French,
whose country she performed in to enormous acclaim, called her a “diseuse”, literally “a female sayer of things.” I love that word, and I enjoy the idea of
slipping it seamlessly into a conversation, although so far, I have had little
luck finding a natural opening where it would organically fit in.
In the show
we saw, Bening presented four extended scenes, offering four distinct characters. In my favorite vignette, she plays what
Stephen Sondheim called one of the “ladies who lunch”, hosting a restaurant
repast for three acquaintances, all of whom have been put on strict diets by
their apparently fad-enthusiast doctors.
(Chirps the man who downs an eight-ounce glass of pomegranate juice every
morning because somebody told him it prevents prostate difficulties.)
One woman
will eat nothing for lunch but carrots.
Another requires eleven glasses of lemon juice. The third, limits her midday meal intake to a
single turnip. The hostess
herself, under “Doctor’s Orders”, restricts herself to three chocolate
eclairs.
So you get
the gist.
The material
is highly perceptive and extremely funny.
But here – finally – we connect with the “lion tamer” analogy.
Annette Bening is an
experienced, skillful and courageously game actress. But, as far as I call tell, she is not a
comedic “natural.”
She
tries. And does commendably well. But, like the lion tamer to whom the lions pay
only perfunctory attention, there is something essentially is missing in her
command. (This deficiency is arguably
augmented by the fact that, as the theater’s program reports, Ms. Bening has
elected to direct herself.)
If you’re me,
possessing an ear attuned to the material’s potential, you can sense that
Draper’s monologues deserve bigger laughs than the performer, lacking the
“basic ingredient” is able to elicit.
You can feel
the audience wanting to laugh more – and
Draper’s delicious observations meriting
more – but Bening’s comedic insufficiencies turn potential thunderous home runs
into opportunity-missing bloop singles.
Bening
delivers her finest moment in the show’s least comedic vignette, where she
portrays a “girl who thinks too much” attending a fancy dress ball. In this case, I was touched and entirely won
over by her intuitive understanding of the character.
Otherwise, I
mostly sat there, imagining which performer might “kill” in a similar situation. Lily Tomlin came to mind (for whom Ruth
Draper, I recall her once saying, was a personal hero.)
Maggie Smith could
also do the trick. As could, going back
a ways, Beatrice Lillie (who once made her entrance on stage, incongruously
attired in a ball gown and roller skates.)
I am reminded
of the film Funny Bones (1995) in
which a successful comedian father (played by Jerry Lewis) sets his abject
failure comedian son (played by Oliver Platt) straight about the delineating
nature of comedic instincts, when he says,
“There’s this thing called ‘Funny
Bones.’ You either have them or you
don’t. You don’t.”
Annette Being
doesn’t either. Nevertheless – and maybe
even more impressively because of its
absence – she is an intrepid lion tamer.
And for that,
I respectfully tip my hat.
1 comment:
Maggie Smith and Lily Tomlin can do *anything*. As can Christine Baranski, who I imagine would also have been fabulous in the show.
Too bad for Bening.
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