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Seattle Rep finds the lyrical heart of Saroyan's 'Time of Your Life'

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  • Seattle Rep finds the lyrical heart of Saroyan's 'Time of Your Life'

    The San Francisco Chronicle
    MARCH 30, 2004, TUESDAY, FINAL EDITION

    Seattle Rep finds the lyrical heart of Saroyan's epochal 'Time of
    Your Life'

    by Robert Hurwitt


    RATING: (WILD APPLAUSE)

    The Time of Your Life: Drama. By William Saroyan. Directed by Tina
    Landau. (Through April 25. Steppenwolf Theatre Company at American
    Conservatory Theater, Geary Theater, 415 Geary St., San Francisco.
    Two hours, 40 minutes. Tickets $20-$73. Call (415) 749-2228 or visit
    www.act-sf.org).

    ---------------------------------

    "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."

    William Saroyan could be pompous to an irritating degree. But that
    final commandment from his Credo for "The Time of Your Life" -- the
    whole text printed on a placard that looms above the action at the
    Geary Theater -- sums up the glory of Tina Landau's exquisite
    Steppenwolf Theatre Company production.

    Life spills from the stage and out across the house. The ugly beauty
    of wasted lives and tawdry dreams, the compelling poetry of
    commonplace cruelties and kindnesses, missteps, hollow boasts, lies
    and tiny leaps of faith fill the theater in an exhilaratingly chaotic
    concoction of the real and the theatrical.

    Landau's vibrant revival attracted national attention when it opened
    at Chicago's Steppenwolf in 2002, and it's easy to see why. Her
    remounted version, which opened Sunday at the Geary, is a
    co-production between the American Conservatory Theater and Seattle
    Repertory (where it played earlier this year) with the same design
    team and a cast made up of actors from all three cities.

    It's a vision right out of a 1930s Thomas Hart Benton mural -- with
    all its intercut shards of scenes vying for attention -- but alive
    with song, dance, drinking and chatter. Saroyan's San Francisco
    waterfront dive spreads across the stage as both a real location and
    a theatrical construct in G.W. Mercier's stunning set. A giant I-beam
    girder extends out from the scaffolds in front of the bare rear wall
    to the edge of a balcony. A crane rises from center stage, and box
    seats have been turned into a brothel.

    There's action everywhere, starting a half hour before curtain time
    and running throughout the play and the intermission -- with single
    and multiple scenes creatively isolated in Scott Zielinski's complex,
    dynamic lighting. There's even a mural in progress, a little more to
    be filled in at each performance during the run. And there's music, a
    constant accompaniment of period (and not) songs and original music
    by Rob Milburn and Michael Bodeen emanating from the upright piano
    and stopping the action for a solo or ensemble number.

    Written in six days and dedicated to theater critic George Jean
    Nathan (who helped get it produced), "Life" confounded critics and
    audiences in '39 but has remained popular ever since. (It was, as
    Saroyan wrote of his first play, a "landmark or turning-point in the
    American theater, and it doesn't matter very much that I was the
    first to say so.")

    Its central action is almost an old-fashioned melodrama: Boy loves
    girl. Evil villain threatens heroine. True love triumphs. In "Life,"
    though, the hero is the goodhearted, simple-minded errand boy Tom
    (the beaming, vital Patrick New). His beloved is the sweet, sad,
    luckless hooker Kitty Duval (an achingly poignant Mariann Mayberry).
    And the villain is the vice squad cop, Blick (Lawrence MacGowan as a
    thoroughgoing petty bully).

    Saroyan twists the tale by making the central character its guardian
    angel, Joe, the barroom philosopher who spends his days drinking as
    he tries to understand life, forget his money (all wealth, he
    explains, is theft) and help anyone he can. As played by Steppenwolf
    co-founder Jeff Perry, he's a magnetic, gimlet-eyed dreamer, rapt in
    faraway musings, awkwardly peremptory and endlessly fascinated by
    every lonely soul he meets. He provides an irresistible focal point
    that radiates attention on every other character.

    That's essential because the beating heart of Saroyan's play is its
    rich trove of comic and affecting saloon denizens. Every one is
    expertly depicted by Landau's large ensemble in the period-perfect
    costumes by James Schuette.

    Some are major players: Yasen Peyankov's crisp, no-nonsense friendly
    Nick, the Greek owner; Don Shell's gentle, sweet-voiced black piano
    player; Guy Adkins' comically eccentric dancer and unfunny would-be
    comedian (a role originally played by Gene Kelly); the superb Howard
    Witt as the buckskin-clad, gravel-voiced spinner of hilariously
    surreal tall tales called Kit Carson.

    Others are minor roles that shine in bright cameos: Robert Ernst's
    sonorous, morose Armenian; Andy Murray's polemical longshoreman; Guy
    Van Swearingen's conscience-stricken cop; Rod Gnapp's cagey drunk;
    the blithely mismatched lovers of the manically smitten, overexcited
    Darragh Kennan and cynical-practical Kyra Himmelbaum.

    The performances alone would make this a first-rate "Life." Landau
    enhances their effect with the uneasy stillnesses and abrupt
    eruptions in her inspired orchestration of the action. She enlarges
    and elevates it with the interplay of subsidiary scenes in the
    brothel, on the scaffolds or in the street beyond Nick's bar --
    bringing to life Saroyan's suggested exterior world of street fights,
    Salvation Army rallies and a tense dock strike.

    Her "Life" is as sweetly humanitarian, bracingly skeptical, richly
    comic and poignantly uplifting as Saroyan could wish. But it's also
    an exciting and energizing, multi-splendor affirmation of life.

    E-mail Robert Hurwitt at [email protected].

    GRAPHIC: PHOTO, Barroom philosopher Joe (Jeff Perry, seated)
    affectionately touches bartender Nick (Yasen Peyankov) in "The Time
    of Your Life." / Brant Ward / The Chronicle
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