The
New York Times,
March 22, 2012
Boozy Nights of a Ravaged Dreamer
Pearl Theater’s ‘Moon for the Misbegotten,’ at City
Center
By
ERIC GRODE
|
Kim Martin-Cotten
and Andrew May in
O’Neill’s play at
City Center Stage
II. (Jacob J.
Goldberg) |
The ravaged James Tyrone on
display at City Center Stage II
in the Pearl Theater Company’s
sure-footed revival of “A Moon
for the Misbegotten,” as played
by Andrew May, has got a certain
quality. He’s downright ...
unexceptional.
This may sound like a criticism.
It’s not. It actually signals a
vote of confidence in the
durability of the role, one of
Eugene O’Neill’s most unsparing
yet most generous, by Mr. May
and his director, J. R.
Sullivan. And it helps further
to cement O’Neill’s final
completed play, a semi-sequel to
“Long Day’s Journey Into Night,”
as one of the 20th century’s
greatest romances.
The 1947 “Moon,” a rustic comedy
that slides first gingerly and
then precipitously into
self-flagellating anguish, is
known primarily for the other
half of the love story at its
center. Colleen Dewhurst and
Cherry Jones are just two of the
women who have stamped their
mark on the formidable Josie
Hogan, who never leaves the
stage during the play’s
more-than-three-hour run time.
But the first two acts — there
are four, and they are sizable —
spend long stretches
anticipating the arrival of
James, a former third-rate stage
actor and current first-rate
alcoholic. (The part is based
closely on O’Neill’s wastrel
brother, Jamie, whom Eugene
worshiped and who died of
alcohol poisoning.)
James is also the landlord of
the Connecticut farm that Josie
(a fine Kim Martin-Cotten) and
her reprobate father, Phil (Dan
Daily), have tended for 20
years. When that tenancy begins
to look in peril, the Hogans
hatch a plan to convert a
longstanding flirtation between
Josie and James into a
bourbon-induced shotgun
marriage.
Living up to O’Neill’s
portentous setups isn’t easy for
anyone in the role of James, and
many have responded by playing
this actor in a very actorly
way. In the two most recent
Broadway revivals, Gabriel Byrne
dripped with Gaelic melancholy,
while Kevin Spacey’s
near-vaudevillian turn reminded
the New York Times critic Ben
Brantley of “a frog on a hot
plate.”
Enter Mr. May, who tries
something completely different
by seemingly not trying. This
James, who has watched “too
goddamned many dawns creeping
grayly over too many dirty
windows,” himself seems to have
been begrimed. Josie’s callused
grandeur and James’s big-city
malaise, so often played in
marked counterpoint, here feel
of a piece.
Transcendence won’t come easy
for either of them, as both Mr.
May’s haggard bonhomie and Ms.
Martin-Cotten’s grasping
insecurity clearly demonstrate.
And when it does come, Mr.
Sullivan’s patient, empathic
staging makes it all the more
satisfying.
And if the pacing occasionally
meanders? Well, that’s to be
expected from a play in which
tumblersful of bourbon are
treated like shot glasses in the
predawn hours. All in all, this
“Moon” illuminates O’Neill’s
unlikely lovers with a bruising
and yet benevolent glow.
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