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Ed Harris and Paul Sparks in Buried Child, at the Pershing Square
Signature Center. (Photo: Monique Carboni) |
When you watch Ed Harris as Dodge, the contrary, irascible patriarch of Sam Shepard’s
Buried Child, in the current revival at New York City's Pershing Square
Signature Center, you realize he was born to play this role – or more aptly, that the role has been waiting around for him to get old enough for it. I
didn’t see Joseph Gistirak, who created the character at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco in 1978, or Richard Hamilton, who took it over in the original
off-Broadway production, but I did see James Gammon in the 1996 Broadway version, and, playing the old man as a kind of ghost sniping at everyone around
him as he continues to haunt the dilapidated Illinois family farmhouse, he performed marvels with that whiskey-soaked, hollowed-out voice. It didn’t occur
to me that I’d ever see a better Dodge. But Harris injects the character, who’s stationed in front of his TV set, sneaking hits of apple jack until his son
Tilden (Paul Sparks) makes off with his bottle while he’s asleep, with a hilariously mean-spirited life force that makes him seem unkillable, even if you
know the play and realize he fades out at the end. Harris became famous for playing a straight-arrow American hero, John Glenn in Philip Kaufman’s 1983
The Right Stuff, but he’s sometimes used his classical American looks, that rangy cowboy handsomeness, as a starting point for an in-depth portrait
– perhaps most vividly as Charlie Dick, husband to Jessica Lange’s Patsy Cline in the 1985
Sweet Dreams. He’s also used it ironically, as he did,
also early on in his career, as the conscienceless mercenary in
Under Fire. His performance in
Buried Child belongs in the ironic category.
You look at this ornery old codger, who doesn’t have a kind word to say about anybody – except, perhaps, his grandson Vince’s girl friend Shelly (Taissa
Farmiga), whose obstinacy he can appreciate (he certifies her “a pistol”) – and see the corruption of the whole frontier legacy. It’s Harris’ scheme to
make that corruption richly funny.