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Landau adds life to Saroyan's 'Time of Your Life'

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  • Landau adds life to Saroyan's 'Time of Your Life'

    Alameda Times-Star, CA
    March 26 2004

    Landau adds life to Saroyan's 'Time of Your Life'

    WILLIAM Saroyan was just 30 when he wrote his most famous play, "The
    Time of Your Life." Up to that point in his career, he was known for
    several short stories, including "Daring Young Man on the Flying
    Trapeze," and for being a brash, confident writer who turned out to
    be the best-known Armenian-American to come from Fresno.


    "The Time of Your Life," a sprawling ensemble piece set in a bar
    along San Francisco's Embarcadero, opened on Broadway in 1939 and

    promptly made Saroyan a notable man of American letters. The New York
    Times called his play a "prose poem in ragtime," and major awards
    soon followed. When he won the Pulitzer Prize for drama, Saroyan
    refused the honor. "Commerce should not patronize art," he said.

    In the preface to the play, Saroyan wrote what has become the epitome
    of Saryonesque style: "In the time of your life live -- so that in
    that good time there shall be no ugliness or death for yourself or
    for any life your life touches. Seek goodness everywhere, and when it
    is found, bring it out of its hiding place and let it be free and
    unashamed ... In the time of your life, live -- so that in that
    wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the
    world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it."

    That paragraph touched director Tina Landau and made her want to
    direct "The Time of Your Life" for Chicago's famous Steppenwolf
    Theatre Company two years ago.

    "That paragraph has truly changed my life," Landau says. "In
    rehearsals we created a tradition of reading the paragraph and
    talking about it each week. We choose one of the imperatives and
    really analyze it, and it was amazing because over time, we all found
    ourselves in very little ways on a daily basis trying to seek
    goodness everywhere.

    "It's sort of an impossible oath to see the best in everything, to
    see the glass half full. And there were, at varying points, varying
    levels of skepticism and despair in the measuring up against it. But
    over time, we have all been deeply touched by those words."

    Years before, when she had read Saroyan's play, Landau had dismissed
    it as unwieldy and sentimental, stuck in its era and more than a
    little nostalgic.

    But after the events of Sept. 11, Landau returned to the play and
    embraced it passionately.

    "What I had seen as a weakness, a kind of rambling, non-narrative
    form, suddenly became a strength to me when I read it the second
    time," Landau says. "It was free form and associative, like a giant
    jazz improvisation with voices and instruments. Saroyan described
    another of his works as a 'circus, a melodrama, a lecture, a
    philosophy of life, anything you like, whatever you want.'

    "With that in my head, 'Time of Your Life' became a wonderful collage
    of moments that worked in and of themselves. I grew to admire his
    sense of abandon in terms of not dealing directly with a well-made
    plot."

    When Landau's "Time" opened in Chicago in 2002, the play won raves
    not unlike those that greeted the original production more than 60
    years earlier.

    That production was re-mounted earlier this year as a co-production
    between Steppenwolf, Seattle Repertory Theatre and San Francisco's
    American Conservatory Theater. Following the Seattle run, the
    large-scale play with a cast of 24 re-opens Sunday at the Geary
    Theatre.

    Landau, one of this country's maverick directors with a flair for
    pushing theater -- especially musical theater -- in new directions,
    was mostly unfamiliar with Saroyan's work when she began working on
    "The Time of Your Life."

    Like many of us, she had read his novel "The Human Comedy" in high
    school, but after devouring his enormous body of work -- novels,
    short stories, plays, essays -- she discovered an intriguing artist.

    "Saroyan was an incredibly complex and contradictory person," she
    says. "I have to be careful what I say about him because there are
    descendants and foundations devoted to him everywhere, but in his
    work, he was able to express a generous spirit and world view that
    maybe he was not as capable of expressing in real life.

    "He was extreme and robust and led more from his heart than from his
    head. He was impassioned and opinionated. In his work, he practiced
    what he preached in terms of live! His work is alive and direct and
    not ornate. It goes right to the pulse."

    To research the play, Landau spent five days in San Francisco to see
    if she could find all the places mentioned in the play, which means,
    essentially, she went bar hopping.

    "I had a great time," she says. "I hung around the waterfront and saw
    where Izzy Gomez's bar, the one that Saroyan turns into Nick's
    Pacific Street Saloon, used to be. My impression was that whatever it
    was Saroyan loved about San Francisco -- he said every block is a
    short story, every hill a novel -- is still there."

    The concept behind the new production is, in essence, to create the
    feel of a sprawling Thomas Hart Benton mural. The set has no walls,
    and there is indeed a mural at the back of the stage that will be
    completed little by little each day of the play's month-long run.

    The 24 actors, who play 50 roles, hang out on the set for about 30
    minutes before the show, and don't leave during intermission. There's
    also ample period music throughout the performance.

    "The whole idea of this play was to create something truly alive,"
    Landau says. "Saroyan said, 'In the time of your life, live,' so I
    wanted something to actually happen in the theater between the play,
    the actors and the audience. If I can't do that, I'd rather not do
    anything."

    Landau and her crew have attempted to structure the play so that it
    can embrace spontaneity and what she calls "true aliveness."

    "I feel like we've done that somewhat," Landau says. "I feel a bit
    like I've been channeling Saroyan."

    "The Time of Your Life" continues through April 25 at the Geary
    Theater, 415 Geary St., San Francisco. Tickets are $20-$73. Call
    (415) 439-2228 or visit www.act-sf.org
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