
Grief As A Laughing Matter
Sisterhood drama is gigglefest at Firebelly.
By Brad Hathaway, The Connection
Wednesday, April 01, 2009
Playwright Beth
Henley was on to something when she envisioned a three-act drama about how
sisters deal with mounting pressures of grief, failure, approaching spinsterhood
and a murder indictment – laughter. After all, when siblings share their
innermost emotions and those emotions get too strong for logical, intellectual
discussion, they must burst out in either tears or laughs.
Firebelly Productions is presenting Henley’s play "Crimes of the Heart" at the
Theatre on the Run on South Four Mile Run Drive through April 19. It plumbs the
depth of that often-ignored reality. After all, bursting into giggles over your
grandfather’s demise might seem to outsiders to be the epitome of bad taste. To
three sisters, however, it is an uncontrollable joint response built on decades
of sibling bonding.
The sisters, in chronological order, are played by Shelby Sours, Melissa Graves
and Sonia Justl. They are the focus of the play, although two men appear on
stage and two others are important people in the story whom we never actually
see.
Sours is the one who has remained at home to care for their grandfather, who, as
the play begins, is hospitalized with yet another stroke but who doesn’t survive
into the third act. In addition to the pressures of being the caretaker for the
last member of that dying older generation, she is also facing her 30th birthday
with a sense of dread as it seems to be the start of the spinsterhood she fears
is her plight. Sours combines a sense of responsibility with a touch of the
girlish giddiness she has yet to shed.
Graves is the middle sister, home in defeat after spending years in Hollywood
waiting tables and auditioning for work in commercials while telling the folk
back home about how well her career is going. (No, she’s not really going to be
on the Tonight Show next week!) Graves gives the role a sardonic sense of the
irony of any situation which those who have had too many doors slammed in their
faces seem to develop out of self protection.
It is Justl who energizes much of the play as the youngest who is out on bail
after her arrest for shooting her husband. She’s in something of a denial stage
and she has difficulty comprehending the seriousness of the information her
young (and attracted) attorney, Jonathan Lee Taylor, tries to get her to
understand.
Director Patricia Foreman presents the play as it was originally intended, as a
three act piece that takes the time needed to set up the relationship of the
three sisters so that the final attack of giggles comes across as a very human
response to intolerable pressures rather than as a cheap theatrical trick. Not
all theaters do it this way. The play was performed with a single intermission
the last time this reviewer saw it and it was not as effective that way.
Henley’s play debuted in 1978 at the Actors Theatre in Louisville before being
staged on Broadway where it added a Tony Award for Best Play to its Pulitzer
Prize for Drama. In 1986 it was made into a movie with Diane Keaton, Jessica
Lang and Sissy Spacek as the sisters.
Brad Hathaway reviews theater in Virginia, Washington and Maryland as well as
Broadway, and edits Potomac Stages, (www.PotomacStages.com). He can be
reached
at Brad@PotomacStages.com.