‘Brooklyn Boy’ casts harsh light on success
Tom Titus
One of the first pieces of advice young authors receive is “Write
what you know.” In Donald Margulies’ new play, “Brooklyn Boy,” this
can be a blessing and a curse -- a blessing for the playwright, whose
latest work, a world premiere at South Coast Repertory, is bound for
Broadway, and a curse for his frustrated protagonist.
“Brooklyn Boy” has to be an excruciatingly personal play, since it
mirrors both Margulies’ geographic and spiritual backgrounds and his
own Pulitzer Prize-winning success. His central character is a
novelist who finally hits it big by returning thematically to his own
turf -- which is when his troubles really begin.
Eric Weiss -- and the Houdini link is not coincidental -- has just
hit the best seller list (at No. 11) with his latest novel, also
titled “Brooklyn Boy,” and you’d think he’d be in hog heaven. But his
father, with whom he’s had self-confidence issues, is dying of
cancer, and his wife is divorcing him. Throw in an old friend from
the neighborhood, who’s accusing him of turning his back on his
Jewish heritage, and success begins more and more to seem like a
two-edged sword.
And, if you think it’s rough in his own backyard, wait until Eric
hits Hollywood, where smarmy superficiality reigns supreme and his
story is deemed “too Jewish” for cinematic consumption. The audience
will share every aching moment of his discomfort when he “takes a
meeting” with an agent and a potential star of the movie version.
Adam Arkin inhabits the role of Eric as if born for the
assignment. Arkin endures more than two hours of personal and
professional tribulation before finally unleashing his frustrations
at the expense of his dead father and his boyhood buddy. And he’s
every bit as adept at pained endurance as he is at aggressive
performance, allowing us access to his soul as the comic tension
mounts.
As his hospitalized father, who later visits him in spirit as the
play winds down, Allan Miller counters Arkin’s intellectual thrusts
with “ordinary” parries, which inevitably draw emotional blood.
Miller’s explanation for his lifelong irascibility, in his second
appearance, doesn’t really hold water, but it serves Margulies’ plot
sufficiently.
Arye Gross achieves the show’s most “natural” characterization as
Eric’s onetime pal whose devoutness to Judaism contrasts with Eric’s
rejection of the faith. Gross projects moving conflict within the
bounds of friendship, a difficult level to attain.
As Eric’s wife -- who’s ostensibly divorcing him for no other
reason than because he succeeded in a literary career and she didn’t
-- Dana Reeve presents an emotionally insecure character who’s
impressive precisely for conveying this weakness so convincingly. Ari
Graynor deliciously portrays a young Hollywood airhead who would
promptly bed down with the writer she meets at a book signing, if he
didn’t consider the prospect so ludicrous.
The Hollywood contingent lapses into parody -- Mimi Lieber as a
high-powered agent bent on emasculating Eric’s novel and Kevin Isola
as a vacuous TV star anxious to inhabit Eric’s hero on the screen, a
prospect that just about sends the author over the edge. This is
familiar territory that’s perennially ripe for satire, and Margulies
skewers it mercilessly.
Director Daniel Sullivan has fleshed out the characters in
“Brooklyn Boy” with meticulous detail, and Ralph Funicello has
designed a superb series of scenic backdrops, including a towering
Brooklyn apartment building that serves as an emotional anchor, while
Chris Parry’s lighting and Jess Goldstein’s costumes serve their
project splendidly.
One note for playwright Margulies: “My Gun is Quick” was the
follow-up to “I the Jury,” not vice-versa, something that old Mickey
Spillane fans will catch right away. Otherwise, a hearty thumbs up
for this Broadway-bound “Brooklyn Boy.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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