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Theater Heroes Of The Fourth Turning

📄 Theater Heroes Of The Fourth Turning

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More Create Blog Sign In TUESDAY, OCTOBER 08, 2019 THEATER: Wrestling With Faith in "Heroes Of The Fourth Turning" HEROES OF THE FOURTH TURNING ** 1/2 out of **** PLAYWRIGHTS HORIZONS Wrestling with your faith is a noble and essential effort.</p><p> You'll find many examples in the Torah, various Christian Bibles and commentary on the Koran, to name just some religious texts.</p><p> Jacob wrestles with the angel.</p><p> Moses kvetches with Yahweh.</p><p> And Abrahamargues with G-d about the possible destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.</p><p> True, that last one didn't turn out so well.</p><p> But the very act of questioning is the point.</p><p> Indeed, in the Jewish faith, for some, arguing and challenging and thinking about ethics and morality andwhether this rule applies to that situation can seem the purpose of religion.</p><p> Playwright Will Arbery hastens to assure us he moved far beyond this movement and its politics. "I uncoiled myself from their world," hewrites in an author's note to his new play Heroes Of The Fourth Turning.</p><p> And yet, that world informs who Arbery is, as surely as William F.</p><p> Buckley Jr. and William Safire and Michael Novak informed me, a Catholic conservative turned independent turnedprogressive.</p><p> Like Jacob, Arbery wrestles with the angels of his childhood: the parents who embraced a far-right strain of Catholicism (and hosted a political event for Pat Buchanan), the isolated Wyoming school wherethey flourished as academics and inspired so many students, and thedeeply conservative friends he grew up with and studied with and debated and argued with far into the night.</p><p> He wants to understand and empathize and humanize the people he loves, but agonizes overwhether this might legitimize some of their poisonous beliefs andactions.MICHAEL GILTZ AT WORK Michael Giltz is a freelance writer based in NYC and can be reached atmgiltz@pipeline.com FAVORITE LINKS Americablog Five O'Clock Lightning baseball blogDeep Pop -- Lori Lakin's Blog The Back Page -- Jason Page on ESPN Radio Cine-Blog -- George Robinson's Blog Documents On Art & Cinema - Daryl Chin's Blog Brucie G's Wondrous Blog Of Adventure and Mystery -- Bruce Greenspan's Blog BLOG ARCHIVE ▼ 2019 (71) ▼ October (9) THEATER: "Terra Firma" Is OnThe result? His play is set in August of 2017 as four friends come together to celebrate Gina, one of their moms and a mentor to them all becoming the head of the Catholic college that has defined their life.</p><p> Two of them remain true believers.</p><p> And while two of them are either questioning some of those stances or so fucked up they can't help butquestion everything, they're far too timid in their tentative steps towards the light (or away from it, depending on your point of view), that they can't really challenge the relentless convictions of the othertwo.</p><p> It's like hanging out with in-laws or old friends.</p><p> You might hint at a difference of opinion, but just don't have the energy or heart to get into it.</p><p> Or you think, "What's the point?" And so the apostates, theones who have realized not all liberals are the devil in disguise, aresimply too afraid to righteously speak their minds.</p><p> The true believersare happy to question themselves, but only when it comes to tactics.</p><p> These people are afraid to confront their own doubts and failings because doubt is for nonbelievers.</p><p> And if someone else tries to open up(which they all do, however tentatively), it's met by an embarrassedsilence or an angry closing of the topic.</p><p> This is a thoughtful, well-acted, sometimes frustrating and ultimately unsatisfying drama worthwrestling with.</p><p> But one element of the production is spot-on: Heroes Of The Fourth Turning takes place in near-total darkness.</p><p> The action takes place mostly in real time at the tail end of a party.First we met the quiet, stoic Justin, a burly man of few words who isalways carrying a weapon.</p><p> At the beginning of the show, he shoots a deer from his back porch but then has trouble gutting it.</p><p> Then during the party, he casually sports a pistol jammed casually into the back ofhis pants.</p><p> If the culture wars break into real violence, Justin will beready.</p><p> He's paired in our minds with Emily.</p><p> She is dealing with a debilitating illness and the fact that everyone around her insists on seeing Emily asShaky Ground THEATER: "The Glass Menagerie" Sans Tricks Or Trea...</p><p> THEATER: Wrestling With Faith in "Heroes Of The Fo...</p><p> THEATER: A Bright Future In Reach For "Chasing Rai...</p><p> THEATER: The Not-So "Great Society" THEATER: BOO! 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(Picture AveMaria University, the school founded in Florida by Tom Monaghan of Domino's Pizza.</p><p> He fondly hoped the nearby town would be free ofpre-marital sex, contraception and pornography.</p><p> In short, PopeBenedict, yes.</p><p> Pope Francis, not so much.) But she's ever so cautiouslythe most rebellious of her friends.</p><p> That amounts to being friends withsomeone who works for Planned Parenthood while still quickly agreeing abortion is murder full stop, but it's something.</p><p> Maybe Emily is simply shaking off the restrictions of being the daughter of two rock star parents, the people everyone around heradmired and loved and indeed worshipped.</p><p> Their friend Kevin, however, is just messed up.</p><p> Maybe his cloistered childhood where any intimation of sex or desire was painted as ugly and sinful is to blame.Maybe Kevin would have had issues even if he was raised by twolesbian moms of color.</p><p> But Kevin is a hapless figure, drinking too hardand incapable of going five minutes without mentioning masturbation or his penis or pent-up sexual desires.</p><p> He's not a train wreck because a train wreck might actually leave some damage in its path.</p><p> Kevin willonly hurt himself.</p><p> He shows up unexpectedly for the party, and is thrilled to discover Teresa has popped in as well.</p><p> She's a fire-breather of a conservative thinker a la Ann Coulter, seemingly making a name for herself delivering diatribes for a Breitbart-style website.</p><p> Arbery is at his bestbringing Teresa to life.</p><p> He may not agree with her views, but he knowsthe power and poetry of a steam-rolling monologue and Teresa gets the best of them.</p><p> These friends banter and bicker back and forth and it's all rather familiar.</p><p> Of course, instead of debating the dotcom bubble or OccupyWall Street's importance, these four debate the culture wars, the incipient violence sure to engulf America (a truism of true believers on the far right and the far left) and various theological ideas.</p><p> But mostlyit amounts to dredging up old issues and new desire.</p><p> Teresa had pre-marital sex but was allowed to remain in school, for example.</p><p> AndKevin desperately wishes the engaged Teresa had shared that bit of sinning with him.</p><p> Like any party, Heroes of the Fourth Turning has an up and down rhythm.</p><p> Something of interest takes place and then it all settles back down again before something else worth noting happens.</p><p> It's never boring, but stretches of the show simply happen, a problem when your characters are afraid or uninterested in confronting one another.</p><p> Oh,they argue and fight and make up and argue again and Kevin throws up (of course) but the unspoken mostly remains just that.</p><p> Director Danya Taymor keeps things on an even keel, though I'm not as sure about the technical side.</p><p> The costumes by Sarafina Bush aresolid.</p><p> But the setting is too solid.</p><p> A large imposing rock or the intimations of a hill or mountain in the distance turns what mighthave been the wide open spaces of Wyoming into a constrictedsuffocating location.</p><p> Maybe their world is as cramped as their ideasseem, sure, but that vaguely imposing structure is too hard to makeout in the too-dark lighting of Isabella Byrd.</p><p> Instead of a specific setting or a symbolic one, it remains...insubstantial.</p><p> Then Gina shows up and the play comes to life.</p><p> Gina is Emily's mom and the mentor they all admire.</p><p> She's also the first person ready totangle.</p><p> Why would the new President of Transfiguration College ofWyoming hesitate to put these kids in their place? So Teresa has aworthy opponent and they go at it with vigor.</p><p> Gina also takes Emily, Kevin and Justin down a peg or two, but it's Teresa who cuts the most formidable target and Gina doesn't hesitate.</p><p> Michele Pawk commandsthe stage every moment she's on it.</p><p> The problem is that these two alpha women are not really challenging each other.</p><p> Teresa is a firebrand who is convinced the culture warswill soon turn violent.</p><p> She sees Christians in the US as an oppressedminority, even though most American Christians (even most Catholics)don't agree with her far right stances on abortion, gay rights and the like.</p><p> She mocks identity politics, sees Hillary Clinton as essentially the anti-Christ and pitys the fool who would try and out-debate her on anyof this.</p><p> I'm sure Gina would agree with every word.</p><p> Sure, Gina mocks Teresa for admiring the yahoos in the new Trump administration.</p><p> Teresa responds by questioning Gina's embrace of PatBuchanan, a stone-cold racist who paved the way for Trump and hisilk.</p><p> But they're not really hitting at the core of their beliefs.</p><p> It's allabout tactics.</p><p> Later, when Emily apologizes for her mom'sbrusqueness, Teresa brushes off their argument as fun.</p><p> And she means it.</p><p> We've been waiting all night for someone to either embrace their beliefs in a convincing manner or question them with power andauthority.</p><p> Ultimately, all Arbery can bring his characters to do is hintat the more radical break they might make some day.</p><p> The cast is strong, but the writing lets them down at the crucial moment when their masks are dropped.</p><p> Justin begins the show bykilling that deer and then hesitating to gut it.</p><p> But if there's aconnection to that and his character during the rest of the show, Imissed it.</p><p> Indeed, Justin wants the school to add marksmanship to the curriculum.</p><p> He's a true believer and a Christian soldier. (Gina says no to adding weapons training, but purely because of the optics.</p><p> Again: tactics!)Kevin blurts out his feelings repeatedly yet they're so entangled with self-loathing it's hard to listen.</p><p> He could use a lot of therapy, if far right conservatives believed in therapy.</p><p> Teresa briefly, shakily confesses she thinks her wedding will be a disaster because she doesn't really have friends, because she keepseveryone at a distance...because she really doesn't know how to love at all.</p><p> Emily shakes off the sickly martyr label everyone slaps on her and even insists her Planned Parenthood friend maybe isn't a Nazi.</p><p> But whatshe really longs for is someone to care for her like a woman and we just know the monk-like Justin won't be the one.</p><p> Their moment of openness with each other might have been a strong ending for theshow.</p><p> Instead, Arbery gives Emily a fit, to the point where she's practically speaking in tongues.</p><p> For a moment it even seems she might be literally sitting on Justin's face after collapsing, forcing the issue of sexual intimacy.</p><p> That outrageousness would be preferable to her out-of-character aria about sleeping around, which is both unconvincing andbeside the point.</p><p> Kevin maybe just needs sex; Emily needs love.</p><p> Whena character spends the entire show primly saying "gosh" to this or thatbit of profanity, it's too easy to have them curse as a way of insisting they're revealing their authentic selves.</p><p> Let's be clear.</p><p> Jeb Kreager is quietly convincing as Justin and doesn't overplay the gung-ho military aspect at all.</p><p> Julia McDermott is strong as the pain-wracked Emily, who is more pained perhaps by slowly understanding her faith is misplaced.</p><p> John Zdrojeski takes an over-the-top loser like Kevin and keeps him rooted in reality, so consistentlya loser you accept him rather than tire of him.</p><p> Zoë Winters dives into the big speeches of Teresa with fervor.</p><p> And yet none of their big emotional scenes truly work.</p><p> It's not their fault.</p><p> Arbery perhapsprefers his characters with their masks on because taking those off --even for a moment -- feels like a betrayal.</p><p> They don't want to removetheir masks, so how can he do it for them? I'll be very interested to see his next play, a show that doesn't come freighted with so much of his specific childhood.</p><p> And a final metaphysical flourish fell utterly flat for me.</p><p> Is it hinting at the End Times? The coming War? Are the walls of Jericho falling? No thanks, not in a show that strives to be rooted in flawed but sincere people.</p><p> Arbery wrestles here with the angels of his childhood.</p><p> Butunlike Jacob and Moses and Abraham, I don't think he was playing towin.</p><p> THEATER OF 2019 Frankenstein: Under The Radar Fest at the Public ** 1/2Minor Character: Under The Radar Festival at the Public *** Ink: Under The Radar Festival at the Public ** 1/2 Choir Boy ** 1/2 White Noise ** 1/2 Kiss Me, Kate *** Ain't No Mo' *** 1/2 Ain't Too Proud ** The Cradle Will Rock * 1/2 Mrs.</p><p> Murray's Menagerie *** 1/2 Oklahoma! (on Broadway) ** 1/2 Socrates ** The Pain Of My Belligerence * Burn This ** Hadestown *** 1/2 All My Sons * 1/2 Tootsie ** 1/2 Ink *** Beetlejuice ** Estado Vegetal *** Hans Christian Andersen * 1/2 Cirque du Soleil: Luzia *** BLKS ** 1/2 Moulin Rouge ** 1/2 Bat Out Of Hell ** Unchilding ** Sea Wall/ A Life ** 1/2 Harry Potter and the Cursed Child *** Betrayal *** 1/2 Fifty Million Frenchmen ** 1/2 Freestyle Love Supreme ** 1/2 Derren Brown: Secret *** (A)loft Modulation * 1/2 The Great Society ** I Can't See * Heroes Of The Fourth Turning ** 1/2 Chasing Rainbows: The Road To Oz *** Thanks for reading.</p><p> Michael Giltz is the creator of BookFilter, a book lover’s best friend.</p><p> It’s a website that lets you browse for books online the way you do in a physical bookstore, provides comprehensive info on new releases every week in every category and offers passionate personal recommendations every step of the way.</p><p> He’s also the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day with top journalists and opinion makers as guests.</p><p> It’s available for free on iTunes.</p><p> Visit Michael Giltz at his website.</p><p> Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and also available for free on iTunes.</p><p> POSTED BY MICHAEL GILTZ AT 5:38 PM NO COMMENTS: Post a Comment Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)Newer Post Older Post Home