Tom Hanks and Courtney B. Vance in Lucky Guy (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
The posthumous Broadway production of Nora Ephron’s play Lucky Guy is handsomely staged by George C. Wolfe, against stylish sets by David Rockwell, and it generates considerable energy. It’s a newspaper play, a rousing genre that now, in the twilight of print journalism, rarely gets tapped by playwrights or screenwriters. (Probably the most recent newspaper movie was Hollywood’s 2009 version of the British TV miniseries State of Play; the last one I can recall before that is The Paper, made a decade and a half earlier, in which the columnist played by Randy Quaid is a fictionalized version of McAlary.) Ephron’s subject is the life and career of Mike McAlary (Tom Hanks, making his Broadway debut), who wrote mostly for The New York Daily News in the eighties and nineties. He rose to prominence when he covered the poisoned Tylenol story in 1985 – which he caught by chance because it broke on a Friday night and everyone else in the newsroom was eager to get home for the weekend – won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the brutalizing of Abner Louima by racist cops, and died of cancer at forty-one. Except for the Julia Child section of Julie & Julia, I was never hot on Ephron’s screenplays, but she came up as a reporter, and for a little while you hope that Lucky Guy, with its speedy tempo and its colorful collection of cheerfully profane newsroom characters, might turn out to be a good entertainment. But it’s barely even a play.
Ephron seems to have had two ideas. The first was to pay tribute to what she believed was the last great era of journalism, which sounds like a perfectly good plan. But her methodology was to cobble together the story out of interviews with the people who knew McAlary best, and their stage counterparts, his fellow newspapermen, pass the story back and forth among themselves, occasionally arguing over how they’re coming across in each other’s narratives. That’s Ephron’s second idea – journalism as a series of competing stories – but the play never develops it; the scene in Hecht and MacArthur’s The Front Page, the greatest of all newspaper plays (and the source of four different movies, including His Girl Friday), where we hear the reporters, yelling into phones to the news desks of their various rags, reconstruct the escape of a Death Row inmate in dramatically different versions, makes the same point more effectively in about a minute and a half. Here the shifting voice of the narration keeps getting in the way of the play; instead of writing it as a series of dramatic scenes, Ephron renders almost all of it in the form of commentary. After half an hour I began to wonder when the actual play would begin. It never really does. And when it gets to the home stretch – the Louima story, the Pulitzer and McAlary’s untimely demise – it violates the premise of the newspaper play, which is a special brand of hard-boiled comedy, and goes sentimental. The narrators start to eulogize McAlary before they even get to his death, painting him as a model of the old-style reporter as a knight who rides out to right the wrongs of the world. Michael Gaston (as Newsday columnist Jim Dwyer) even reads his final speech with tears in his throat; the play’s descent into melodrama is complete when we hear somber piano music over the final scene.
Tom Hanks and Maura Tierney (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
The supporting actors give the play an edge that isn’t in the writing, and they seem to be having a high time. But I kept imagining them in a production of The Front Page, and my fantasy revival was way better than Lucky Guy.
– Steve Vineberg is
Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross
in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and
film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and The
Boston Phoenix and is the author of three books: Method
Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No
Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in
American Movies.
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