Last Wednesday night, Rattlestick
Playwrights Theater & Page 73 presented the New York Premiere of “Orange
Julius” by Basil Kreimendahl
as directed by Dustin Wills.
At the end of 90 minutes of fine acting
by the small cast on the compact stage, I asked myself, “What was that play
about?”
“Orange Julius” has many elements.
The five-person cast was fabulous,
particularly Stephen Payne as Julius
and Mary Testa as his long-suffering
wife France — I do not recall ever hearing her name, but that was her name
according to the program. Of course, it
was his name that was important: Naming
a Vietnam vet “Julius” allowed him to make a joke about Orange Julius while
linking his name with Agent Orange.
Mr. Payne and Ms. Testa played with
utter naturalness, creating organically grown and shaped and developed characters
in beautifully textured performances.
Their children were called “Nut” (played
by Jess Barbagallo) and “Crimp” ( played by Irene Sofia Lucio). The first time we see her she’s crimping her
hair and threatening to crimp that of her little sister. These two have a lovely sibling rivalry,
taunting, teasing, helping one another.
A real relationship on paper, although a real connection between Mr. Barbagallo and Ms Lucio seemed lacking.
The play takes place in the family
garage, which sometimes seems to play a living room, sometimes a car, and, when
the garage door is open, Vietnam. Kate Noll’s set design was simple and clear,
evoking a time, an economic class, a trap.
Montana
Levi Blanco’s costume design was
excellent — every person was wearing clothes befitting the character. That’s
good costume design, to be essentially unnoticed. The small space was well lit by Barbara Samuels and the sound by Palmer Hefferan was effective. Director Dustin
Wills’ staging used the tight quarters to excellent advantage.
The play begins in the 1980s, told in
flashbacks by an ever-present onstage narrator — Nut — who talks way too much
and is not quite reliable. She — or he —
is earnest, but memory is not fact, as noted when Nut says he was 7, 9, or
8. Later she was 12, or 10 or 13.
Nut is of small stature. While referred to throughout as a girl, a
daughter, a sister, Nut is played by a male. Nut speaks of wanting to go through a past
life regression, to the audience, and to his mother when still pre-pubescent. Is this play Nut’s past life regression? The confusion is not clearly settled (perhaps
not for Nut either), even when Nut’s older sister offers him/her a training bra. Nut at some point was a girl, but enters the
Vietnam scene clearly as a male.
Nut is simultaneously engaging and
annoying. Sister “Crimp” is sometimes
mean or angry, always the epitome of a big sister bestowing wisdom and love on
her younger sister, Nut. At least one
character is missing, a brother referenced in several scenes but never seen. Is he dead?
Is he in a hippie commune feuding with his Vietnam vet father? There’s a story left untold. Not every story need be told, yet the missing
brother nagged at me and held my interest longer than Nut did. Because Nut is telling the story, it’s an
awful lot about him/her when it is Julius and Mary who are the most interesting
characters.
Back to my original question: What is this play about? What point is playwright Kreimendahl trying
to make?
ەThe effect of war on the next generation?
ەThe
aftermath of science used for evil (i.e., Agent Orange)?
Possible fact:
Julius went to war, was attacked by American military industrial complex
and fatally poisoned with Agent Orange.
It was vile from the very beginning and it took decades to kill, but
kill it did, via multiple cancers.
Not quite possible fact: Nut says that in Vietnam, a girl was born the
same day he was and her father too had been poisoned with Agent Orange. The Vietnamese father was dead and the girl
was born with bulging eyes that could never close.
Is that true? How
could Nut know that? We only know what
Nut tells us, shows us, but we readily believe that Julius was poisoned with
Agent Orange and died a slow death psychologically and physically. Therefore, should it not follow that we
believe that a girl was born in Vietnam the same day Nut was, with a birth
defect, possibly connected to the poisoning of her father with Agent Orange.
ەIs
the play about the nature of Self? Of Truth?
There are many flashbacks to Vietnam played
beyond the open garage door with Julius and the angry foulmouthed soldier “Ol’
Boy” (only named in the program), well played by Ruy Iskandar. Julius and “Ol Boy” are there, but so is “Nut.” Or at least the actor is. Was his “past life” self there, is he playing
someone else, is he playing his father?
But Julius was in the same scenes.
It’s not that they weren’t good compact little scenes. It’s that they didn’t make much sense as a
part of the whole. Is this Nut in his
memories of another life? Has this character
in Vietnam anything to do with Nut? Are
any of Nut’s memories reliable?
An old television is on a worktable in
the garage. It is often on through the
play, showing old films and television programs and a lot of “Platoon.” I do not have clear memories of that film,
just the scenes repeatedly shown in movies about war movies. An audience cannot be expected to remember
the film, and yet I think much of it was re-enacted in the Vietnam flashbacks,
so what was the story of Julius and why was Nut re-enacting “Platoon?”
Meanwhile, Nut’s sister grows up to be a
nurse who is defecated on by a patient she was turning to prevent
bedsores. While this was clearly not on
purpose, still, this is what she thinks her life is, being “dumped” on. She is
bitter. Her choices seem to be based on
what she knows she can do (take care of sick people) but which do not please
her. She tried to help her mother care
for her father, but France wouldn’t always allow it. France needs help and cries out for it, but
does not accept it from her children. Ms.
Testa’s pain is heartbreaking.
It’s difficult to know over what time
period the episodic play takes place:
mostly in the 1980s, although once Nut says it’s 2004. There are some touching moments, some funny
ones, some sad ones. Late in the play, and presumably in time, France tries to
feed her husband baby food, which may be all that he can stomach. He pushes the spoon away, makes a mess as a
child would, and pushes France’s hand away.
He then gently clasps her wrist.
He is still Julius, her husband.
The moment is brief, but memorable. Julius is broken, supported by his
family. He is angry, he is in pain, he
has terrible memories. France is
cracking under the strain but holds the family together no matter what. Sister “Crimp” traveled in and out, seemingly
always there until we’re told she lived in another part of the country. At some time or another. Time matters.
Nut appears to have been transgender in
a time that would not be forgiving or understanding. That issue, however, comes off as a sidebar,
a distraction from the real story of Julius & France. If the play is supposed to be about Nut discovering
herself as male, why isn’t that the story?
Why not tell Julius’ story with a son?
We don’t know why Nut is telling us all this, and since she or he isn’t
a reliable narrator, we may never know.
All in all, I liked everything about the
production except the play, because the playwright could not make up his mind
as to what it was about. Many
interesting elements, interesting moments, interesting characters. But too many
elements. It was a surprisingly long 90
minutes.
~
Molly Matera
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