Blythe Danner in The Country House (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
In Donald Margulies’s new play, The Country House, at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, Blythe Danner plays Anna Patterson, the matriarch of a theatrical family. A famous actress, Anna has returned to the Williamstown Theatre Festival – and to her summer home in the Berkshires – a year after losing her daughter, also an actor, to cancer. The family assembles in this house of memories. Anna’s son Elliot Cooper (Eric Lange) is a difficult, obstreperous man who can’t get parts because no one wants to work with him and who has stumbled into middle age without finding a romantic partner. At this juncture he’s suddenly decided to become a playwright; he’s planning to ask his unsuspecting family to read his first effort aloud. His brother-in-law Walter Keegan (David Rasche), who parlayed a successful career as a stage director into an even more enviable one as a filmmaker, shows up with his new, younger fiancĂ©e, Nell McNally (Kate Jennings Grant) – also an actress – a beauty whom everyone is drawn to despite their discomfort with the way Walter has moved on so speedily after the death of his wife. Nell draws the admiration of both Elliot – who acted with her one summer, years earlier, and has romanticized that brief friendship into unrequited love – and another celebrity appearing that summer in Williamstown, Michael Astor (Daniel Sunjata), the star of a hit sci-fi TV series whom Anna, with motives that are not entirely pure, has invited to sleep on the living-room couch while his house is being fumigated. The only person in the house who isn’t charmed by Nell is Walter’s daughter Susie (Sarah Steele), a Yale student, the only character on stage without either a theatrical career or an interest in obtaining one. Susie is incensed at what she sees as her father’s disloyalty to her mother’s memory, and when Michael falls for Nell, she has even more reason to hate her stepmother-to-be, since she’s had a crush on the handsome actor since she was a little girl.
If the scenario sounds familiar, of course it is: Margulies has refitted Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, though he’s stitched in a few yards of material from The Sea Gull. Anna’s role doesn’t have an equivalent in Vanya; she’s really Arkadina, which means that Elliot is double-cast as Vanya and Treplev – at one point he even quotes Treplev – and Michael is too, as Astrov and Trigorin. (Margulies recreates the crucial – and highly theatrical – third-act scenes from The Sea Gull between Arkadina and her son and Arkadina and her lover. Michael never actually sleeps with Anna, but she throws herself at him in the way Arkadina throws herself at Trigorin in order to woo him away from Nina.) Margulies is very canny; Michael isn’t a doctor like Astrov, but he plays one on television, and the knee injury Walter sustains in act one while he’s jogging with Nell stands in for Serebryakov’s gout. There’s even an interlude where Susie, the Sonia character, begs Michael not to get drunk (and stoned) with her uncle because it isn’t good for him. (In this version he clearly has substance problems.)
Sarah Steele and Eric Lange (Photo by Joan Marcus)
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The Country House is fairly enjoyable, but Margulies doesn’t pull off the trick of making the characters’ predicaments moving as well as comically ridiculous – that is, the trick of emulating Chekhov. And though his dialogue is ingenious, not all of it is convincing. There’s too much exposition (the first act is nothing but), and when Susie complains, in act two, that her father sounds like a Lifetime movie, you can’t help thinking that if he does, it’s because Margulies couldn’t devise any other way for Walter to convey his feelings for Nell. He does his most skillful writing in act three, and this time around he gives Walter the best speeches, but this is the truth-telling act, and it’s too heavily weighted. (It’s also the act in which Elliot tries to choke Walter, just as Vanya tries to shoot the professor.)
But my most frequent complaint about contemporary plays is that they strand talented performers, and you can’t argue that Margulies doesn’t give his actors enough to do. Under Daniel Sullivan’s direction everyone is showcased. The only actor I’d say is hobbled by the way her character has been written is Steele, whom fans of The Good Wife will recognize from her recurring role as Eli Gold’s daughter. Steele has an appealing ironic presence, but in the first act, when Susie is commenting bemusedly to Michael on his career and his habit of dating models, you can’t help observing that this Ivy League undergrad is being an unremitting pain in the ass. It may occur to you later that her behavior comes out of feelings for him that she knows he can never reciprocate, but Margulies hasn’t written the scene well enough for glimmers of her heartache to slip through her jibes, and Steele hasn’t found a way to play it so they do.
Kate Jennings Grant and David Rasche (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
– 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 Movie.
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