Review: The Pillowman
By Alec Clayton
Published
in The News Tribune, April 27, 2018
from left: Andrew Fry, Jacob Tice and Christian Carvajal, all photos by Dennis K Photographer |
“The Pillowman” at Tacoma Little Theatre
is a dark and brutal comedy not suitable for children or for the squeamish, but
brilliantly written by Martin McDonough and staged by director Blake York.
This is the first play set outside of
Ireland by celebrated Irish playwright McDonough, author of the Academy
Award-winning “Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri” and the plays “The
Beauty Queen of Leenane” and “The Lieutenant of Inishmore.”
Jacob Tice and Christian Carvajal |
Sean Neely and Jacob Tice |
The
setting for the play is a bleak police interrogation room in an unnamed
totalitarian state (there are hints, including some character names, that it is
somewhere in Eastern Europe). Katurian (Jacob Tice) and his brother Michael
(Sean Neely) are brought in for questioning about a string of gruesome murders
of young children. The cops who question them in a gallows-humor spin on a good
cop-bad cop routine are Tupolski (Andrew Fry) and Ariel (Christian Carvajal).
The reason the brothers are suspected is many of Katurian’s short stories
resemble the murders. When Katurian finds out, Michael, whom Katurian describes
as childlike and "slow to get
things,” is there and being kept by the police in another offstage
interrogation room, Katurian is infuriated.
All the four major
characters are complex and multi-layered men, and each, with the possible
exception of Michael, turns out to be quite different than they at first seem.
The “good cop” is sly, manipulative and cold-hearted beneath his kindly
exterior, and the “bad” cop, who is anxious to torture and brutalize both
Katurian and Michael, turns out to have a heart after all.
McDonough’s
writing is intricately and beautifully constructed and full of surprises. The
story is both bleak and funny, with hints of Tom Stoppard and Franz
Kafka, and even Grimm’s fairy tales, which are alluded to by
Katurian. The jailhouse setting reminds me of Theater Artists Olympia’s production
of George Orwell’s “1984.”
Tice is proving to be
one of the South Sound’s most versatile actors, totally different in every role
he takes on. As Katurian he appears to be sponge-like, adapting his personality
to suit the situation from moment to moment, and achingly vulnerable throughout.
His character is never off stage.
Carvajal plays Ariel as
an almost insane brute, bursting with constrained nervous energy. It’s worth
the price of admission just to watch the way he smokes a cigarette (no actual
smoke).
Fry plays Tupolski as
one of the kindest and most normal of a group of bizarre characters, but
audiences can sense his underlying sadistic streak.
Seattle actor Neely,
new to Tacoma stages, is simply stupendous as Michael. His physical quirks and
hesitant manner of speech perfectly express the psyche of an abused person.
Neely and Carvajal each auditioned only for their particular roles and no
other, and each said Michael and Ariel, respectively, were dream roles.
There are four other
actors who do not have speaking roles, who are excellent but about whom I shall
not say anything because the scenes they are in should come as a surprise, and
I do not want to spoil it. It’s a great bit of staging by Blake.
“The Pillowman” is not
recommended for children younger than 13. There is as much profanity as in a
Tarantino movie, and there is violence, blood and a gunshot. Yet despite all
the gore, there is much humor and a heartfelt look into the complexities of
human beings.
WHEN:
7:30 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, through May 6
WHERE:
Tacoma Little Theatre, 210 North I Street, Tacoma
TICKETS:
$20-$24, pay what you can May 3
INFORMATION:
(253) 272-2281, www.tacomalittletheatre.com
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