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Theater: Kathleen Chalfant Shines At The El Portal In A Story Of The

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  • Theater: Kathleen Chalfant Shines At The El Portal In A Story Of The

    KATHLEEN CHALFANT SHINES AT THE EL PORTAL IN A STORY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Charles McNulty, Times Theater Critic

    Los Angeles Times
    May 20 2008
    CA

    'Red Dog Howls' by Alexander Dinelaris

    In a long and exemplary stage career, Kathleen Chalfant is giving
    one of her most shattering performances at the El Portal in North
    Hollywood. Audiences beware: It's a harrowing experience, not for the
    faint of heart. Few actresses would be as courageous -- never mind
    capable -- of traversing this particular moral abyss. But then her
    searing work in "Angels in America" and "Wit," along with decades of
    infusing combustible human truth into classics, couldn't have prepared
    her better for the challenge.

    The play, Alexander Dinelaris' "Red Dog Howls," had its world premiere
    Monday in a production sharply directed by Michael Peretzian. The
    story concerns the legacy of the Armenian genocide on a troubled
    thirtysomething New York writer who's haunted by psychological ghosts
    he wants to banish before his first child is born. But to get to a
    place of light, he must tunnel into a pit of darkness that threatens
    to swallow his identity, his marriage and even his unborn baby.

    Addressing us directly, Michael (Matthew Rauch) explains that after
    his father died, he found a stash of his letters. A note instructing
    him to burn them is heeded, but not before he jots down the address
    of the sender. This clue leads him to a 91-year-old woman, who turns
    out to be his grandmother -- and the one person who can tell him why
    his beloved father and grandfather lived under such a pall.

    Related 'Red Dog Howls' But answers to agonizing questions do not
    come easily, and Dinelaris has written the play as though it were a
    detective novel, with Michael leading the investigation, Oedipus-like,
    into his mysteriously besieged soul. One can't help thinking of the
    Greeks, even though this isn't a tragedy but a tale of redemptive
    survival. The catastrophe lurks in the past, not the future, but the
    events described rival the horror of the House of Atreus, Agamemnon's
    blood-soaked clan who similarly understood a traumatic history as a
    hereditary curse.

    Michael, who has only the sketchiest sense of his background, doesn't
    want the misery confounding him to be passed down. He's afraid of
    losing his wife, Gabriella (Darcie Siciliano), and ominously reflects
    on the way the wives of his grandfather and father vanished from their
    lives. "It was, for lack of a more exact term, a plague on our family,"
    he says.

    Dinelaris' focus is on the developing relationship between Michael and
    his grandmother, Vartouhi, who slowly prepares him for the terrible
    knowledge he seeks. She feeds him bowl after bowl of rice pilaf
    soup with lemon, which he laps up as nourishment from the Armenian
    culture he knows precious little about. She tests his strength,
    practically vanquishing him at arm wrestling and somehow lifting him
    into bed one night after he falls asleep on her couch. To survive the
    Armenian massacres that began in 1915 and wound up decimating a world,
    Vartouhi has had to turn herself into steel. And the play affectingly
    shows why she cannot readily confide in her grandson. What happened
    to her defies speech. The two must inhabit the dim memory together,
    often in silence while she lovingly watches him eat.

    The material is inherently devastating, which makes some of Dinelaris'
    punched-up dramatic strategies seem unnecessary. There's a bit too much
    "character" business going on with Vartouhi, Michael's intermittent
    narration grows ponderous and the ending is marred by a melodramatic
    twist that undermines the drama's credibility.

    But for the most part, the production is beautifully executed. Tom
    Buderwitz's sets, particularly his old-world conjuring of Vartouhi's
    Upper Manhattan apartment, are superb. And the onstage musical
    accompaniment of composer Ara Dabandjian deepens the mood with its
    fusion of Mediterranean sounds.

    Rauch is the drama's solid center, and he lets us feel the urgent
    struggle taking place inside Michael as though a clock were ticking
    and his very stability were on the line. Siciliano's Gabriella makes
    a formidable spouse -- she won't accept anything less than an equal
    partnership. Her edges may be severe, but she reveals an authentic
    tenderness as well, and it's too bad Dinelaris allows her to fade
    into the background.

    The spine-stiffening cry emanating from "Red Dog Howls," however,
    comes courtesy of Chalfant, whose artistry, moral passion,
    intelligence and heartbroken humanity combine into an indelible
    act of witness-bearing. It's a miraculous performance, rallying the
    forces of art against atrocity and permitting us to see in the midst
    of meaninglessness an ember of hope and repair.
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