Cast of Our Only May Amelia. Photo by David Nowitz |
Our Only May Amelia at Olympia
Family Theater is adapted from the
Newberry Award winning novel by Jennifer L. Holm. It is a pioneer story in the
vein of Little House on the Prairie
and the works of Willa Cather, set in Southwestern Washington and told in a
series of episodic scenes.
Thirteen-year-old May
Amelia Jackson (Kate Hayes) is the only girl in the Jackson family. They’re
living a hardscrabble life on a small farm in the Naselle River Valley. Her
mother, Alma (Samantha Chandler) is pregnant when the show opens. Her father,
Jalmer (Keith Eisner) is overwhelmed by the demands of running the farm and is
overly hard on his family, especially his daughter. Her brother Matti (Jeremy
Holien) wants to escape to Astoria and marry his love, Mary O’Casey (Stephanie
Kroschel), but fears he’ll have to run away to do so because Pappa hates everyone
Irish. The other brother, Wilbert (Adam Peters), is a dreamer with a poetic
soul.
Kate Hayes as May Amelia. Photo by Dinea Dephoto |
May Amelia’s brothers tease her unmercifully, her father treats her
far too harshly, her grandmother Patience (Diana Purvine) shows up and it soon
becomes clear that she hates her venomously and for no apparent reason. It
seems her only allies are her mother, who is sick and pregnant and has a hard
time caring for her, and her Aunt Alice (Debbie Sampson) who lives in Astoria. This
is not a happy life they live.
Harsh and unrelenting tragedy follows harsh and unrelenting tragedy in
this gritty story, but familial love triumphs in the end— and I say “love
triumphs” with reservations, because life was tough on the frontier and there
is no grand exaltation in this story. It is a sad and touching story
beautifully acted by the entire cast.
It may be the toughest role I’ve ever seen Eisner play, and it is
definitely the best acting I’ve seen from Purvine, who, much to her credit,
makes the audience despise grandmother Patience. Both Peters and Holien are
likeable and convincing as the brothers who alternately tease and support their
sister. The other women in the cast, Sampson, Chandler and Kroschel have smaller roles but play them well.
Hayes is simply amazing as May Amelia. What a treat it is to see a
promising child actor begin to mature into an accomplished adult actor—she and
the equally amazing Clarke Hallum as May Amelia’s cousin Kaarlo fit their
respective roles as if they were written with them in mind. Both already made
their marks in impressive performances as younger children and prove here that
they can play more grownup roles (young teens in this show, but teens who
forced to grow up in a hurry). In 2010 when he was 11 years old, Hallum was
outstanding in the leading role as Ralphie in A Christmas Story at Seattle’s 5th Avenue Theatre. He
was last seen in Olympia, if my memory is correct, in The Full Monty at Capital Playhouse. Hayes was a knockout in The Secret Garden in 2011, also with
Hallum, and was great in her cross-gender performance as the Artful Dodger in Oliver in 2014. In this show both Hayes
and Hellum tug on heartstrings. Both are utterly believable as teenagers trying
to survive an almost primitive life in the Pacific Northwest wilderness at the
beginning of the 20th century.
Also deserving special recognition are set designer Jill Carter, prop
artists Jan Rocks and Wendy Eisler, and costumer Becky Scott.
Some of the material is heavy and may not be suitable for young
children.
Our Only May Amelia runs Thurs.-Fri., 7 p.m., Sat.-Sun. at 2 p.m. through April 5.
Olympia Family Theater, 612 4th Ave E, Olympia,
360-570-1638