Kieran Culkin and Michael Cera in This is Our Youth (Photo by Brigitte Lacombe) |
As the late adolescents in the Broadway production of Kenneth Lonergan’s three-hander This Is Our Youth, Michael Cera, Kieran Culkin and Tavi Gevinson are improbably loose and funny together, like performers with strikingly disparate styles who’ve been working together so long they can anticipate each other’s moves. It’s slacker vaudeville. This play, which was Lonergan’s breakthrough, was first produced off Broadway in 1996, with Mark Ruffalo, Josh Hamilton and Missy Yager; it had a limited run but received so much praise that it reopened two years later (with Mark Rosenthal stepping in for Hamilton), and Jake Gyllenhaal, Hayden Christensen and Anna Paquin picked up the roles when it was mounted in the West End in 2002. This new production, directed by Anna D. Shapiro with an acute sensitivity to the play’s complex tonality, is the first time the play has been seen on Broadway. Though the Sunday evening performance I attended was full, overall it hasn’t been drawing crowds – and it deserves to sell out. I saw a tape of the 1998 revival, and though Ruffalo was very funny as the drug-addled misfit Warren, I ran out of patience for the characters. You could see Lonergan’s talent for dialogue and for rendering the milieu, upper-middle-class Manhattan Jewish teens in the early 1980s, very bright but derailed, with highly successful career-focused parents with whom they have brittle, sometimes ugly relationships. (Lonergan’s superb 2011 film Margaret has the same geographical and social setting, though it takes place three decades later.) But the play felt insubstantial. Shapiro’s production is both funnier and more poignant – and it gives a much sharper sense of how good the script is.
Culkin plays Dennis, whose ailing celebrity-painter
father has agreed to bankroll his post-high school party-boy lifestyle, paying
for a one-room apartment because (according to Denny) it means that he doesn’t
have to live with him. It’s not clear how much of an allowance Denny gets from
his parents; whatever it is, he supplements it by selling drugs. Cera’s Warren
lives with his father, who is physically abusive and whom he loathes. (His
remarried mother lives in Florida.) When the play begins, he’s just stolen
$15,000 from his dad – as a way, it seems, of attracting his attention as well
as making a statement. It’s almost a reflex gesture, like a discomfited pet’s
soiling the rug. He arrives at Denny’s while he and his girl friend Valerie are
having a spat that Lonergan renders entirely in abrupt, hilarious one-way phone
conversations. We never meet Valerie; Gevinson plays Jessica, her best pal, who
gets invited along to the evening’s drug-centered festivities as an unofficial
date for Warren. But the two couples never connect, and Jessica winds up
spending the night with Warren while Denny and Valerie are off together,
reconciling and then quarreling afresh.
The friendship between Warren and Denny seems like it
can’t have changed much since they were ten. (That’s a guess; we aren’t told
exactly how long they’ve known each other.) They still act like kids on a play
date who get bored and restless in the middle. Denny is the cool kid whose
company Warren must have felt privileged to share, so he’s put up with being
Denny’s punching bag – psychologically as well as physically. (Denny doesn’t
hurt Warren; it’s enough for him, apparently, that both young men always know that
he could kick Warren’s ass if he
wanted to.) When Warren returns from his romantic night with Jessica and tells
him he splurged on a night in the Vanderbilt Suite at the Plaza, Denny
responds, typically, by saying that the Plaza is a dump and he should have
booked a room at the Pierre. Denny thinks he’s conveying how pleased he is for
his friend, but all we can hear his need to put Warren down – and after all
this time, and now that he’s lucked into the chance at a girl friend, and
someone he cares about (Denny, of course, has never had to worry in that
department), Warren finally hears it too. He calls Denny on it, suggesting that
he’s not in his corner, and Denny, who is so used to lording it over Warren, is
stunned at the suggestion. His casual insults (he’s forever telling Warren how
stupid he is), he insists, are just the way they talk to each other. The truth
is, they’re the way he talks to Warren.
Michael Cera and Tavi Gevinson (Photo by Brigitte Lacombe) |
– 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment