The plot of Beth Henley's new play The Jacksonian, set in a motel in Jackson, Mississippi in
1964, is so crammed with incident that it feels a little like a flea
market for ideas left over from other plays she hasn’t got around
to writing. The main character, Bill Perch (Ed Harris), is a dentist
with a taste for his own nitrous oxide and a lackadaisical practice.
He’s living at the Jackson while he tries to patch things up with
his wife Susan (Amy Madigan), who threw him out for beating her up –
hurting her “more than usual,” according to their adolescent
daughter Rosy (Juliet Brett) – though Susan’s paranoia where
Bill’s concerned mostly stems from his having allowed the doctor to
perform a hysterectomy when she was discovered to have an ovarian
cyst. Rosy, who narrates the story, is a highly imaginative teenager
who ferries back and forth between her parents and campaigns against
their getting a divorce. Bill is an object of romantic interest to a
motel chambermaid named Eva White (Glenne Headly) when the bartender,
Fred Weber (Bill Pullman), calls off their engagement: she wants
someone to marry her. She’s miffed that it can’t be Fred,
since she gave false testimony to alibi him for a convenience store
robbery and murder for which an innocent black man is sitting on
death row. But then, she doesn’t think too much of African
Americans; she’s rabidly anti-integration, unlike Bill, who
deplores his father’s politics (he’s a Klansman) but, out of
necessity, continues to live off his checks.
That’s a lot of narrative for a ninety-minute play, which also has a flashback structure that I couldn’t quite work out. But I don’t think all these complications amount to much, though as usual in Henley’s plays there are patches of colorful writing that don’t sound like anyone else’s. Fred protests that he can’t marry Eva because he has a “decayed” heart that’s bound to lay down on him sooner or later: “Set your sights on the living,” he advises her. Later he admits to Rosy that he lied about his medical condition to get out of marrying a woman who “smells like broken-down crayons.” Bill’s profession is a hilarious running gag – not only because of his recreational use of nitrous (which turns out to be rather ghoulish) but mostly because of the way he begins every conversation by inquiring about his listener’s teeth: he’s always trolling for patients. (Eventually he has to stop practicing dentistry when – no doubt working out his anger at his dad – he extracts all the teeth of one unlucky bastard who makes the mistake of boasting about his role in the burning of a Negro church.) The style is southern Gothic enhanced by Henley’s distinctive comic oddness.
Juliet Brett & Ed Harris |
The Jacksonian may not be a
very good play, but we all know that there are other reasons to go to
the theatre. The excitement of watching Ed Harris live justifies the
excursion, and he’s only one of five exceptional actors on the same
stage. I’d say this is one of the highlights of the current New
York season.
– 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 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
– 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 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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