‘Redwood’ envelops Newport audience
Tom Titus
What are the chances of a 17-year-old half-Vietnamese girl finding
her natural father in a place where the woods, literally, are full of
Vietnam War veterans? As the young lady herself admits, about the
same as winning the lottery.
This doesn’t stop the determined Geri Reardon, however. She’s been
using her summer vacations with her aunt in Northern California for
this purpose since she was a little girl. And this year, all her
efforts may pay off.
The distinguished playwright Lanford Wilson (“Tally’s Folly,” “The
Hot L Baltimore”) hones in on this need for completion, or closure,
in his stirring drama “Redwood Curtain,” now on stage at the Newport
Theater Arts Center. It’s a craftsman-like three-hander, a deeply
involving personal journey calculated to touch and move its audience.
Director David Colley has cast three excellent performers in this
richly textured exercise, and their interaction weaves a compelling,
occasionally complicated story. It’s quite brief at an
intermission-free hour and 45 minutes, which still could have been
shortened with the omission of a subplot that does nothing to advance
the story.
Chances are Wilson realized his play was a virtual one-act and
attempted to extended it with a tiring segment about industry’s
encroachment on the environment. This only succeeds in temporarily
derailing the main thrust of the story and has nothing to do with the
girl’s search for her father.
The centerpiece of “Redwood Curtain” -- apart from the giant trees
that occupy half the stage -- is the magnificent performance of Julia
Cho as the young lady on a quixotic personal quest. Cho’s Geri is a
brilliant, highly articulate overachiever and gifted concert pianist
with self-anointed supernatural power, and the young actress enriches
this character with a tremendously moving depiction.
The old man she virtually stalks in the woods -- a shellshocked
former combat engineer who “doesn’t do well with people” -- receives
a deeply involving portrayal from Howard Patterson. Shuffling,
averting eye contact and shouting at his unseen dog, Patterson
inhabits this pitiful derelict with painful realism.
Cheryl Pellerin completes the cast as Geri’s Aunt Geneva, the only
one of the three who seems fully in touch with the realities of the
modern world. Pellerin performs her mediator character skillfully,
but is charged with projecting the play’s immaterial subplot, a task
she handles quite well.
The Newport theater has faced and conquered the challenge of a
woodsy setting before -- in last season’s “Camping With Henry and
Tom” -- but set designer Martin Eckmann has outdone himself with the
construction of three giant redwoods, which dominate the stage and
are so crucial to the story.
Mitch Atkins’ fine lighting design and Tom Phillips’ costumes --
particularly Patterson’s ragged attire -- enhance the show
considerably.
“Redwood Curtain” will touch many hearts on a variety of levels
even today, some 30 years after the Vietnam War’s conclusion. Just
bring a warm coat in case the temperature inside is even chillier
than outside, as it was opening night.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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