Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Wasserstein-Long-Wharf
Full Text:
THEATRE REVIEW: Masterful Wasserstein At Long Wharf II
(with cut)
By Julie Stern
NEW HAVEN -- By way of apology for derailing her confirmation as Surgeon
General, Timber Tucker, the television interviewer whose burnished hair and
throaty masculine voice are his only claim to substance, confides to the
heroine Lyssa Dent Hughes, his "chaos theory of broadcasting: No matter what
is said on the airwaves, it will all be totally forgotten within three
minutes."
Perhaps this is why Wendy Wasserstein's An American Daughter , now on stage at
Long Wharf's Stage II, was less than successful when it played Lincoln Center
two years ago. Too many minutes had elapsed since Lani Guinier, Zoe Baird and
Kimba Wood were left twisting in the wind by a President quick to take credit
for opening up important jobs to qualified women, but lacking the moral fiber
to stand behind his candidates once media exploitation of alleged infractions
in their past led to a dip in opinion polls.
Lyssa, a descendent of Ulysses Grant and daughter of a prominent conservative
senator, is a modern wonder woman: a respected hospital director and professor
of public health at Georgetown University, she is also a beautiful and
charming wife and mother who bakes for her family and attends her twin sons'
soccer games. When the play opens, she is awaiting the senate confirmation of
her appointment as the next Surgeon General.
Clearly she is a shoo-in for the job. But in a television news magazine
interview meant as a puff piece on Lyssa's ability to balance all her roles, a
spiteful family "friend" points out that she once forgot to answer a summons
to jury duty which came just as she was about to leave for an out-of-town
lecture tour.
Within days this issue of Lyssa's "lack of civic responsibility" is turned
into a "jurygate" scandal by aggressive media coverage. Various "talking
heads" are invited to offer their analysis of the subject on weekend news
programs -- including the up-and-coming voice of feminism, Quincy Quince (who
just happens to be having a fling with Lyssa's husband), her graduate school
mentor and the bold young neo-conservative and openly gay pro-lifer, Morrow
McCarthy (who just happens to be the family friend who "inadvertently"
mentioned the jury duty).
Soon public opinion polls are diverted from the weighty question of whether
the First Family Pet should be a dog as opposed to a cat, and Timber Tucker
announces in his gravest tones that American sentiments are now running
four-to-one against Lyssa's appointment... Can slick young Billy Robbins,
Lyssa's father's political consultant, help her salvage things?
But this play is far more than a political roman a clef, in which a discerning
viewer can speculate as to the real identities of Lyssa, her father the
conservative senator, as well as Timber, Quincy and Morrow.
An American Daughter is Wasserstein's take on the course of feminism and
American liberalism in general. Lyssa and her best friend, Judith Kaufman,
grew up in a time when they had to fight tremendous discrimination and gender
bias in order to earn their medical degrees and achieve high level jobs in
their respective professions.
Motivated by determination and ambition they each succeeded, but the force of
their struggle has created vulnerabilities. Now in their forties they still
are driven by the need to be perfect, and troubled by the anxiety that in some
way they may not be able to do so.
Meanwhile, Quincy, at age 22 the author of the latest doctrine on feminism,
has been able to take for granted the opportunities the older women fought
for. Women's Studies has become a specialized field within the sociology
curriculum, and Quincy can concern herself with the question of how to enjoy
the privileges of equality without having to pay any personal price.
It is not just feminism that has been so co-opted. All the impassioned
movements of the Sixties in which earnest true believers faced ridicule, jail
and even death (for standing up against the Vietnam War, Southern segregation,
and the pervasive sexism that shaped our society), yielded many victories and
the generation who reaped the benefits of their parents' sacrifices has grown
up relatively free from the constrictions of institutionalized exclusion.
Unfortunately this generation, too often, is also free from the sense of
unselfish commitment that inspired the protests.
Lyssa's father, the conservative Senator Alan Hughes, who disagrees with
everything she stands for (but loves and admires his daughter), is a charming
old coot. Lyssa and Judith, both brave and shaken, are admirable in their
strength.
But in a world dominated by a ratings driven media, searching for the next
"breaking story" that will boost their share, it is ironic and troubling that
the "best and the brightest" representatives of the new generation are an
opportunist, a poseur, and a spinmeister.
With all of this, Wendy Wasserstein is a masterful playwright who creates her
usual mix of humor, dramatic tension, vivid characters and emotional impact.
As with Long Wharf productions in general, the acting is impeccable. This play
is running on the smaller Stage II, and early performances were sold out, as
they should be.