L-R: Boolie (Robert Geller), Daisy (Syra Beth Puett) and Hoke (Malcolm J. West), photo by Jason Ganwich |
There’s a new theater in town, and it has kicked off its
season with it’s one and only play for 2013:
Alfred Uhry’s Driving Miss Daisy.
Dukesbay Productions was founded in 2011 by Tacoma theatre
artists Randy Clark and Aya Hashiguchi Clark. Popular personalities on the
South Sound theater scene, the Clarks already have a long and lustrous history.
Randy has been active in the Tacoma theatre scene as an actor and director
since the 1970s. His work has been seen at Lakewood Playhouse, Tacoma Little
Theatre and Theatre NW. He currently serves on the Board of Directors for
Tacoma Little Theatre. Aya has appeared at several Seattle/Tacoma theaters,
including ReAct Theatre, SIS Productions, Renton Civic Theatre, Tacoma Musical
Playhouse, Tacoma Little Theatre and Lakewood Playhouse, and served as producer
for eight plays and a Playwrights Festival for Burien Little Theatre.
They built their new theater in the historic Merlino Art
Center in Tacoma, home to The Grand Cinema, The Tacoma City Ballet and Corina
Bakery. It is a lovely performance space with a well-designed seating
arrangement. There is not a bad seat in the house.
Driving Miss Daisy was written by Uhry in 1987 as a tribute to his Atlanta-based family. It won a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Outer Critics Circle Award. The film adaptation starring Morgan Freeman and Jessica Tandy won four Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Screenplay.
Driving Miss Daisy was written by Uhry in 1987 as a tribute to his Atlanta-based family. It won a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Outer Critics Circle Award. The film adaptation starring Morgan Freeman and Jessica Tandy won four Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Screenplay.
The story begins in 1948. Miss Daisy (Syra Beth Puett) has
wrecked her car and her son, Boolie (Robert Geller) believes she is not a safe
driver any more. He hires an elderly black man, Hoke (Malcolm J. West) to be
her chauffer. Daisy is a 72-year-old widow, a fiercely independent Jewish woman.
At first she is disdainful and refuses to let Hoke drive her anywhere, but
gradually he wins over, and as they age — she lives to be almost 100 — he
becomes her best and only friend.
It is a sweet play about their developing friendship and
mutual dependence played out against the backdrop of the civil rights movement
in Atlanta, Georgia, presented as a series of short vignettes with a lovely set
designed by David Wehmhoefer with effective lighting, also by Wehmhoefer and
sound effects by Nic Olson.
While the struggle for civil rights in the South is a
constant element in this play it is kept secondary to the developing
relationships between Daisy, her son and her chauffer. Similarly, class and religious differences play
a role but are subsumed by the personal.
Puett, who was born in Montgomery, Alabama, and grew up in
the Deep South seems born to play this role, and she is outstanding. Her
Southern accent is natural and believable; she ages gracefully, and displays a
range of emotions that are captivating.
West is solid as a rock as Hoke. He nails the speech
patterns and demeanor of a proud and sensitive man who works as a domestic
servant in the South during those years. Geller also nails the speech patterns,
accent and gestures.
I need to inject a personal note here. Like Puett, I was
born and grew up in the Deep South. I knew people just like Daisy and Hoke and
Boolie, and these three actors made me feel like I had been transported back
home and back in time.
Congratulations to the cast and crew; outstanding director,
Julie Halpin; and producers Randy and Aya Hashiguchi Clark.
Driving Miss Daisy is a short play, running about 90 minutes
with no intermission.
WHERE: The Dukesbay Theater in the Merlino Arts Building, 508 S. Sixth Ave. #10
WHEN: Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. through Nov. 23
TICKETS: $15, includes coffee and an assortment of baked goods
For reservations:
By phone (253) 267-0869
By email: info@dukesbay.org
Reservations are recommended. Tickets payable at the door by cash, WA State check or credit/debit card.
www.dukesbay.org.
Also see Michael Dresdner's review.
WHERE: The Dukesbay Theater in the Merlino Arts Building, 508 S. Sixth Ave. #10
WHEN: Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. through Nov. 23
TICKETS: $15, includes coffee and an assortment of baked goods
For reservations:
By phone (253) 267-0869
By email: info@dukesbay.org
Reservations are recommended. Tickets payable at the door by cash, WA State check or credit/debit card.
www.dukesbay.org.
Also see Michael Dresdner's review.
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