A very warm Saturday evening, in late mid-May, the
culmination of an intensely busy & bustling afternoon in mid-town Manhattan, fire trucks,
people, and ambulances everywhere you turn, and a 9th Avenue street
festival, for several blocks running, comprising the now expected and quite ordinary
“things” to consume – from the usual proliferation of imitation designer sun
glass stands to middle eastern food vendors, lots of fast food, and lots of
smoke, everywhere. Nevertheless, it is
energizing to be a part of it all, on the way to dinner at a never-tried and seemingly
not too widely known Turkish-Mediterranean restaurant and, following our pre-theater
repast, on to a newly opened off-Broadway theater event at Theatre Row on west
42nd Street ... the final play this season for The New Group – a new
play by the celebrated playwright, David Rabe.
You might also consider choosing one of Balkanika's “specialties” – the Duck Confit (leg of duck marinated in wine &
herbs de Provence, served with roasted potatoes & salad, @ $17.) or
the Beef Sarma (stuffed grape & cabbage leaves w/ beef, rice & spices, furnisto
potatoes & creamy yogurt sauce, @ $14.).
Coffees – especially the Turkish coffee – proved sufficiently dark, rich,
smoky & fortifying, while dessert
plates, regionally inspired but a bit on the mundane side, consisted of your
choice, at $5. or $6., of assorted baklava & kadayif, mini marzipan cakes, chocolate
mousse with hazelnuts, or strained Greek yogurt & honey in a fruit &
walnut parfait.
Indeed, you will surely remember the old-world feel to this unique theater district resto – the friendly atmosphere, the reasonable prices, the idiosyncratic Balkan wines by the glass ($8.-11., depending), the boutique beers ($5.-7.), and a palpable eagerness to satisfy the diner in every respect.
To my mind the David Rabe theater piece fared far less well. Two of us enjoyed the play – An
Early History of Fire (I won’t burden you with the significance &
derivation of the title; you’ll learn all about that if you happen to see the
play) – and rather identified & empathized with, and understood, the various characters (including Danny, the protagonist),
their mid-Western angst and boredom (it is 1962, and just a few years before
the decade of the‘60s really begins to take hold), their stifled “conditions,” their hopes & fears (somewhat vague), their plights.
I (and my wife), on the other hand, thought the play (the dialogue, the
speeches) bloated and the characters, really, flaccid and without finely tuned
presences, their problems real but amorphous, and their on-stage antics & interactions
intemperate, even boisterous (disconcertingly noisy, overall!), and, well, ultimately of negligible value.
The play concerns itself with the daily lives, daily interactions,
and loyalties (or lapsed loyalties) of 3 working-class young men – Danny, Jake
& Terry – when Danny’s new girlfriend (a rich young woman on vacation from college
in the East who has fallen for him, or his type, at least temporarily) enters
their orbit; Danny’s immigrant father, Pop; Pop’s friend, would-be 2nd
son, fool & foil, Benji; and Terry’s former high school sweetheart (now “turning
tricks,” a prostitute), Shirley. Surrounding all
of the on-stage (interpersonal) chaos we get reflections from Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye & other fictions (the thoughts & feelings of Holden Caulfield, the Glass
family, Seymour, and so forth), Orwell (“Who is big brother?”), references to
Norman Mailer, and some additional disaffected word-play loosely derived from
Kerouac and On the Road.
So, what does all of this add up to beyond the theatrical miasma
of a pre-60s, mid-Western “hell” out of which Danny must extract himself,
with or without his girlfriend, Karen, and with or without his father’s, Pop’s,
approval. And he must move to this other
place, this other world, while writing, or, rather, learning to write!
The author of such highly praised plays as The Basic Training
of Pavlo Hummel (his first; 1971), Sticks and Bones, Streamers,
and Hurlyburly, Rabe has, over the past several decades, written
a series of highly successful and award-wining (Drama Desk, Tony,
New York Drama Critics) plays. An
Early History of Fire, not very tautly directed by Jo Bonney, in my view, simply
does not possess the full & cogent power of Rabe's earlier works, nor rank with earlier
productions of his major plays.