So
this is the Army
By
Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Sept. 26, 2019
Aaron Mohs-Hale (Carney), Drew Bates (Eugene) and John Munn (Sgt. Toomey) from the Lakewood Playhouse Production of Biloxi Blues. Photo credit: Lakewood Playhouse |
Cassie Jo Fastabend (Daisy) and Drew Bates (Eugene) from the Lakewood Playhouse Production of Biloxi Blues. Photo credit: Lakewood Playhouse
(Reality check regarding the script: there is no Army base in Biloxi, the nearest one is Camp Shelby, 70 miles to the north.)
New
York Times theater critic Frank Rich, heaped lavish praise on it in the
mid-1980s, saying it was much better than Brighton Beach. I must
disagree. I think Brighton Beach was much more down to earth and
believable, although both have plenty of Simon’s famous humor and humanity. In
the first play in the trilogy, there was more Jewish humor and puberty jokes;
in this one it is barracks humor, which does not go over as well in 2019 because
it is crass and sexist.
Typical
of plays and movies about basic training — think Full Metal Jacket, No
Time for Sergeants and An Officer and a Gentleman — there is a hardnosed
drill sergeant the recruits fear and ultimately love. At this camp it is Sgt.
Toomey (John Munn). Also typically, the genre has to include at least one
misfit who doesn’t belong in the Army. Here it is Arnold Epstein (George
Blanchard), an intellectual who Eugene suspects is gay. The major conflict
throughout is between Epstein and Sgt. Toomey, because Epstein, the true hero
of the play, refuses to buckle under what he sees as Toomey’s arbitrary and
inhumane treatment of the recruits. The other major conflict comes to light
when the men in the barracks sneak a peek at Eugene’s personal journal, which
includes his assessments of their personalities, much of which is significantly
less than flattering.
Mostly
handled with compassion and humor, the play deals with antisemitism and, somewhat
less sensitively, with homophobia. And there is love interest as Eugene comically
visits a whore house and then meets and falls in love with Daisy (Cassie
Fastabend) at a USO dance.
Epstein
is the most complex character in the play, and Blanchard captures the many
aspects of his personality, from his sweetness and intelligence to his sometimes
arrogance and snarkiness.
Bates’
portrayal of Eugene is as likeable and humorous as it was in Brighton Beach.
Believably five years older, his humanity shines through. Munn is outstanding
as Sgt. Toomey. He looks the age and size for the part, and his bluster does not
seem fake. His toupee is the mother of awful toupees. Fastabend is not on stage
often, but when she is, she is marvelous as a young woman in love but constrained
by the nuns at her Catholic school from expressing that love.
The
other recruits are played by young actors, as they should be, but their
relative inexperience shows. We see them straining to act their parts.
Lakewood
Playhouse warns that the play includes “mature military language and conversations
of an adult nature.”
I
would not be going too far out on a limb to presume Lakewood Playhouse is going
to do the third part of the trilogy, Broadway Bound, in a coming season.
It should be in the cards.
Biloxi Blues, 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, through Oct. 6, $27.00,
$24.00 Military and seniors, $21.00 students and educators, pay what you can
Feb. 28 and March 6-7, Lakewood Playhouse, 5729 Lakewood Towne Center Blvd. Lakewood,
253.588.0042, lakewoodplayhouse.org.
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