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Brighton Beach Memoirs a theatrical success
Written by Barbara Shainbaum
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
TORONTO – Brighton Beach Memoirs, Neil
Simon’s rich, funny yet poignant semi-autobiographical play,
which opened the 2009-10 Teatron Jewish Theatre’s season
(Nov. 11-22) certainly drew crowds and soldout nights at the
Toronto Centre for the Arts.
Written in 1983 and the winner of the New
York Drama Critic's Circle award for best play, it focuses
on the Jeromes, a New York Jewish family, in the Brighton
Beach section of Brooklyn in 1937, during the Depression,
chronicling the coming-of-age story of 15-year-old Eugene
Jerome who wants to be a writer someday, but whose immediate
concerns fixate on baseball and seeing his lovely cousin,
Nora, naked.
When each of the characters, (two families living together
in one house), want more independence and try striking out
on their own, conflicts arise within the play: Blanche’s
16-year-old daughter Nora, the object of Eugene’s desire,
has an opportunity to audition as a Broadway dancer;
Eugene’s older brother Stanley, considers joining the army
after gambling away his money; Blanche has accepted a dinner
date with a drunken Irish non-Jew and the family fears she
might marry him; Kate and sister Blanche experience a major
blow-up that releases 20 years of resentment, making
Blanche want to move out.
The family’s centre cannot hold, and repressed feelings come
pouring out, threatening to blow them apart. The
consequences of their actions are affecting and believable,
making the play emotionally satisfying.
Directed and produced by Teatron’s Artistic Director Ari
Weisberg, Brighton Beach Memoirs, was headed up with a
strong cast: B.J. Jeroy as Eugene Jerome, made a convincing
and comic young Woody Allen-like character. Nicole Fairbairn
anchored the stage as gritty, aproned and long-suffering
matriarch Kate Jerome, caring for two sons and her widowed
sister, Blanche. Jeanette Tyzer as Blanche Morton, Kate’s
live-in, unemployed, widowed sister, invested her character
with a suitable plaintive yet engaging determination. Jordan
Cohen as Stanley Jerome, Eugene's wayward older teenage
brother who prefered work instead of education, inhabited
him with a dominant and youthful air. Arnie Zweig as
Eugene’s father, Jack Jerome, the sole family provider
struggling to support his extended family while holding down
several jobs, conveyed the necessary browbeaten quality
mixed with understanding, underplayed humour and resilience.
Vanessa Graymason as Nora Morton, the object of Eugene’s
libido, captured her character’s good-girl qualities mixed
with growing sensuality and independence. Laella Saffer as
Nora’s ill sister Laurie Morton, effectively showed how she
uses her heart-murmur to advantage.
Undertones of impending war and the uncertain fate of the
family’s European relatives, added a sombre edge to the
drama. However, this being a Neil Simon play, it was
seasoned with enough humour and zingy one-liners mouthed by
the young Eugene, the playwright’s alter ego.
Impressive sets by Ed Rosing, realistic period costumes by
Adrienne Baker, the strong cast, and deeply-felt and
well-paced direction by Ari Weisberg, made Brighton Beach
Memoirs a theatrical success. Certainly the audience, who
gave it a standing ovation the night I attended, responded
to the play’s pathos and humour contained within Simon’s
messy family drama. |
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